SELECT 


LIST  OF  REFERENCES 


ON 


THE  NEGRO  QUESTION 


COMPILED  UNDER  THE  DIRECTION  OF 

APPLETON  PRENTISS  CLARK  GRIFFIN 

CHIEF  BIBLIOGRAPHER 


SECOND   ISSUE 

WITH  ADDITIONS 


WASHINGTON 

GOVERNMENT  PRINTING  OFFICE 
1906 


u> 

LIBRARY  OF  CONGRESS 


SELECT 
LIST  OF  REFERENCES 


ON 


THE  NEGEO  QUESTION 


COMPILED  UNDER  THE  DIRECTION  OF 

APPLETON  PRENTISS  CLARK  GRIFFIN 

CHIEF  BIBLIOGRAPHER 


SECOND   ISSUE 

WITH  ADDITIONS 


WASHINGTON 

GOVERNMENT  PRINTING  OFFICE 
1906 


L.  C.  card,  6-35017 


PREFATORY  NOTE 


This  is  one  of  a  number  of  lists  upon  topics  of  current  interest 
which  have  been  compiled  to  meet  requests  by  letter.  So  far  as  it 
could  be  distributed  at  all  it  has  hitherto  been  distributed  in  type 
written  form.  The  applications  have  become  so  numerous  that  it  has 
now  been  reduced  to  print,  so  as  to  be  available  for  more  general 
distribution. 

alt  has  no -claim  to  completeness;  nor  does  it  even  attempt  to 
exhaust  the  resources  of  this  Library  on  the  subject.  Its  purpose  is 
merely  to  present  some  of  the  authorities  of  interest  to  the  general 
inquirer.  The  special  investigator  must,  of  course,  go  much  further. 

A.  P.  C.  GRIFFIN 
Ch  ief  of  Division  of  Bibliography 

HERBERT  PUTNAM 

Librarian  of  Congress 

Washington,  D.  C.,  March  26,  1903 

a  NOTE. — This  issue  has  received  some  new  titles,  but  not  sufficient  to  change  the 
character  of  the  List  as  described  above. 
WASHINGTON,  D.  C.,  June  9,  1906 


I  6520! 


LIST  OF  BOOKS  ON  THE  NEGRO  QUESTION 


Abbott,  Ernest  Hamlin.  Religious  life  in  America.  A  record  of 
personal  observation. 

New  York:   The  Outlook  company,  1902.     xii,  370pp.     8°. 
"Religious  tendencies  of  the  negro,"  pp.  81-104. 

American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.  America's 
race  problems.  Addresses  at  the  fifth  annual  meeting, 
April  12-13,  1901. 

[Philadelphia:   American   academy   of  political   and  social 
science,  1901.}     187  pp.     8C. 

Contents:  The  races  of  the  Pacific:  The  natives  of  Hawaii;  a  study 
of  Polynesian  charm,  by  Titus  Munson  Coan;  The  races  of  the 
Philippines — The  Tagals,  by  Charles  C.  Pierce;  The  semi-civilized 
tribes  of  the  Philippine  Islands,  by  Oliver  C.  Miller;  The  causes 
of  race  superiority,  by  Edward  A.  Ross;  The  race  problem  at  the 
South:  Introductory  remarks,  by  Hilary  A.  Herbert;  The  relation 
of  the  whites  to  the  negroes,  by  George  T.  Winston ;  The  relation 
of  the  negroes  to  the  whites  in  the  South,  by  W.  E.  Burghardt 
Du  Bois;  The  races  of  the  West  Indies:  Our  relation  to  the  people 
of  Cuba  and  Porto  Rico,  by  Orville  H.  Platt;  The  Spanish  popu 
lation  of  Cuba  and  Porto  Rico,  by  Charles  M.  Pepper. 

American  negro  academy.     Occasional  papers.     Nos.  1,  2,  4,  6. 

Washington,  D.  C.     Published  by  the  Academy,  1897-1899. 
4  vols.     8°. 

Bald-win,  William  H.  jr.     The  present  problem  of  negro  education. 

(In  American  social  science  association.  Journal,  number  37, 
December,  1899,  pp.  52-68.) 

Barringer,  Paul  Brandon.  The  American  negro:  his  past  and  future. 
3d  edition. 

Raleigh,  N.  C. :  Edwards  &  Broughton,  1900.    23  pp.     8°. 

' '  The  sacrifice  of  a  race. "     An  address  delivered  before  the 

race  conference  at  Montgomery,  Ala.,  May  10,  1900. 

Raleigh,  N.  C.,  1900.     30pp.     8°. 

5 


6  LIBRAKY    OF    CONGRESS 

Blair,  Lewis  H.     The  prosperity  of  the  South  dependent  on  the  eleva 

tion  of  the  negro. 
Richmond,  Va.:  E.   Waddy,  1889.     ix,  147pp.     12°. 

Blyden,  Edward  W.     Christianity,  Islam  and  the  negro  race.     With 

an  introduction  by  the  Hon.  Samuel  Lewis.    2d  edition. 
London:   W.  B.   Whittingham  c§  co.,  1888.     (!,},  aw,  (!},  433 
pp.  8°. 

"African  colonisation,"  pp.  383-423. 

"Appendix.    The  Republic  of  Liberia,"  pp.  425-432. 

Brackett,  Jeffrey  R.  The  negro  in  Maryland.  A  study  of  the  insti 
tution  of  slavery. 

.Baltimore:  N.  Murray,  1889.  (6],  268pp.  8°.  (Johns 
Hopkins  University  studies  in  historical  and  political  science. 
Extra  vol.  6.) 

-  Notes  on  the  progress  of  the  colored  people  of  Maryland 
since  the  war.  A  supplement  to  The  negro  in  Maryland: 
a  study  of  the  institution  of  slavery. 

Baltimore:  Publication  agency  of  the  Johns  Hopkins  Univer 
sity,  July,  August,  September,  1890.  96  pp.  8°.  (Johns 
Hopkins  University  studies  in  historical  and  political  science. 
Eighth  series,  7—8-9.} 

Brannon,  Henry.  A  treatise  on  the  rights  and  privileges  guaranteed 
by  the  fourteenth  amendment  to  the  Constitution  of  the 
United  States. 

Cincinnati:  W.  H.  Anderson  &co.,  1901.    ix,  (1),  562pp.    8°. 

Brown,  William  Garrott.     The  lower  South  in  American  history. 

New  York:   The  Macmillan  company,  1902.     xi,  (1),  271  pp. 


"The  Ku  Klux  movement,"  pp.  189-225. 
"Shifting  the  white  man's  burden,"  pp.  245-271 

Bruce,  Philip  A.     The  plantation  negro  as  a  freeman.     Observations 

on  his  character,  condition,  and  prospects  in  Virginia. 
New  York  and  London:    G.  P.  Putnam's  sons,  1889.     ix,  (1), 
262pp.     12°.     (Questions  of  the  day,  no.  57.} 

Cable,  George  Washington.     The  negro  question. 

New  York:    Charles  Scribner's  sons,  1890.     vi,  (2),  173  pp. 

12°. 

-     The  silent  South,  together  with  the  freedman's  case  in  equity, 

and  the  convict  lease  system.     New  edition. 
New  York:    Charles  Scribner's  sons,  1889.     vi,  (2),  213  pp. 
Portrait.     12°. 


LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    THE    NEGBO    QUESTION  7 

Calhoun,  William  Patrick.     The  Caucasian  and  negro  in  the  United 
States.     They  must  be  separate.     If  not,  then  extermina 
tion.     A  proposed  solution :  colonization. 
Columbia,  S.  C. :   The  R.  L.  Bryan  co. ,  1902.     171  pp.     Por 
trait.     12°. 

Chandler,  Julian  A.  C.     Representation  in  Virginia. 

Baltimore:  The  Johns  Hopkins  press,  1896.  83  pp.  8°. 
(Johns  Hopkins  University  studies  in  historical  and  politi 
cal  science.  Fourteenth  series,  6-7.} 

[Christmas,  L.  T.]     An  evil  router  from  all  the  walks  of  life — from 
the  cradle  to  the  grave.     A  panacea  for  racial  friction  and  a 
crowning  benediction  to  humanity. 
Raleigh,  N.  C.,  Edwards  &  Broughton,  1900.     26pp.     8°. 

Clayton,  Virginia  V.     White  and  black  under  the  old  regime.     With 

introduction  by  F.  C.  Morehouse. 

Milwaukee:  The  Young  churchman  co.,  [1899],  195  pp. 
Plates.  Portraits.  16°. 

Clowes,  W.  Laird.  Black  America:  a  study  of  the  ex-slave  and  his 
late  master.  Reprinted,  with  large  additions,  from  "The 
Times." 

Cassell  <&  company,  London,  [etc.],  1891.  ayiii,  (!},  24-0  pp. 
Map.  12°. 

Cook,  Charles  C.     A  comparative  study  of  the  negro  problem. 

Washington  D.  C. :  Published  by  the  Academy,  1899.  llpp. 
8°.  (American  negro  academy.  Occasional  papers,  no.  4>) 

Cross,  Samuel  Creed.     The  negro  and  the  sunny  South.     A  lecture. 
/S.  C.  Cross,  publisher,  Martinsburg,  West  Va. ,  1899.     136pp. 
Portrait.     12°. 

Culp,  Daniel  Wallace,  ed.  Twentieth  century  negro  literature;  or, 
A  cyclopedia  of  thought  on  the  vital  topics  relating  to  the 
American  negro,  by  one  hundred  of  America's  greatest 
negroes. 

Naperville,  III. :  J..L.  Nichols  A  co.,  [1902].  472pp.  Fron 
tispiece.  Portraits.  8°. 

Curry,  J.  L.  M.  1.  Difficulties,  complications  and  limitations  con 
nected  with  the  education  of  the  negro.  2.  Education  of 
the  negroes  since  I860. 

(In  United  States.    Commissioner  of  education.     Report,  1894-95, 
vol.  2,  pp.  1366-1384.     Washington,  1896.) 


8  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Du  Bois,  W.  E.  Burghardt.  The  college-bred  negro:  report  of  a 
social  study  made  under  the  direction  of  Atlanta  univer 
sity;  together  with  the  proceedings  of  the  fifth  conference 
for  the  study  of  the  negro  problems,  held  at  Atlanta  uni 
versity,  May  29-30,  1900. 

Atlanta,  Ga. :  Atlanta  university  press,  1900.  (2},115,(l)pp. 
8°.  (Atlanta  university.  Publications,  no.  5.} 

-  The  conservation  of  races. 

Washington:  Published  l>y  the  Academy,  1897.  15  pp.  8°. 
(The  American  negro  academy.  Occasional  papers,  no.  2.) 

The  negro  common  school.  Report  of  a  social  study  made 
under  the  direction  of  AtLnta  university;  together  with  the 
proceedings  of  the  sixth  conference  for  the  study  of  the 
negro  problems,  held  at  Atlanta  university,  on  May  28, 
1901. 

University  press,  Atlanta,  Georgia,  1901.  (.£),  ii,  (2),  1%0  pp. 
8°.  (Atlanta  university.  Publications,  no.  6.) 

The  negro  in  business.  Report  of  a  social  study  made  under 
the  direction  of  Atlanta  university;  together  with  the  pro 
ceedings  of  the  fourth  conference  for  the  study  of  the  negro 
problems,  held  at  Atlanta  university,  May  30-31,  1899. 

Atlanta,  Georgia,  1899.  (4),  77  pp.  8°.  (Atlanta  univer 
sity.  Publications,  no.  4-} 

-  The  negro  in  the  black  belt:  some  social  sketches. 

( In  United  States.     Department  of  Labor.     Bulletin  vol.  4,  no.  22, 
pp.  401-116.     Washington,  1899.     8°.) 

The  negro  landholder  of  Georgia. 

(In  United  States.    Department  of  Labor.     Bulletin  no.  35,  pp.  647- 
777.     Washington,  1901.     8°.) 

-  The  negroes  of  Farmville,  Virginia:  a  social  study. 

( In  United  States.     Department  of  Labor.     Bulletin,  vol.  3,  no.  14, 
pp.  1-38.     Washington,  1898.     8°.) 

-  The  Philadelphia  negro,   together  with  a  special   report   on 

domestic  service,  by  Isabel  Eaton. 

.Boston:  Ginn  <&  co. ,  1899.  8°.  (  University  of  Pennsylvania. 
Publications.  /Series  in  political  economy  and  public  law, 
no.  IJf-.} 

-  A  select   bibliography   of   the   American    negro  for   general 

readers. 

Atlanta,  Geoi^gia,  1901.  11  pp.  8°.  (Atlanta  University. 
Publications.) 


LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    THE    NEGRO    QUESTION  9 

Du  Eois,  W.  E.  Burghardt.  Some  efforts  of  American  negroes  for 
their  own  social  betterment.  Report  of  an  investigation 
under  the  direction  of  Atlanta  University;  together  with 
the  proceedings  of  the  third  conference  for  the  study  of 
the  negro  problems,  held  at  Atlanta  University,  May 
25-26,  1S98. 

Atlanta,  Ga. :  Atlanta  university  press,  1898.     (#),  66  pp.    8°. 
(Atlanta  university.     Publication*,  no.  3.} 

Ferrer  de  Couto,  Jose.     Los  negros  en  ,su  diversos  estados  y  condi- 
ciones;  tales  como  son,  como  se  supone  que  son,  y  como 
deben  ser. 
Nueva  York:   Ttnprenta  de  Hallet,  1864.     310,  (1) pp.     8°. 

Fortune,  T.  Thomas.     Black  and  white:  land,  labor,  and  politics  in  the 

South. 

New  York:  Fords,  Howard,  cfe  Hulbert,  1884.     310pp.     16°. 
(American  questions.} 

G-aines,  D.  B.  Racial  possibilities  as  indicated  by  the  negroes  of 
Arkansas. 

Little  Rock,  Ark. :   Print,  dept.  of  Philander  Smith  college, 
1898.     189pp.     Illustrations.     12°. 

Gannett,  Henry.     Occupations  of  the  negroes. 

Baltimore:  Published  l>y  the  Trustees,  1895.     15 pp.     Plates. 
8°.     (John  F.  Slater  fund.      Occasional  papers,  no.  6.) 

Reprinted  in  United  States.     Commissioner  of  Education.     Report, 
1894-95,  vol.  2,  pp.  1385-1396.     Washington,  1896. 

Gibson,  J.  W.,  W.  H.  Crogman,  and  others.     The  colored  American 

from  slavery  to  honorable  citizenship. 

J.  L.  Niclwls  <&  co.,  Atlanta,  Ga.  [etc.]  1902.     7 3% pp.     Illus 
trations.      Plates.     Portraits.     8°. 

Gruthrie,  James  M.  Camp-fires  of  the  Afro- American,  or,  the  col 
ored  man  as  a  patriot,  soldier,  sailor,  and  hero,  in  the  cause 
of  free  America. 

Philadelphia:  Afro- American puh.  co.,  1899.    710pp.    Illus 
trations.     Plates.     Portraits.     8°. 

Gruthrie,  William  D.     Lectures  on  the  fourteenth  article  of  amend 
ment  to  the  Constitution  of  the  United  States. 
Boston:  Little,  Brown  and  company,  1898.     xxviii,  265  pp. 
8°. 

Hampton  normal  and  agricultural  institute.     Twenty-two  years'  work 
of  the  Hampton  normal  and  agricultural  institute  at  Hamp 
ton,  Virginia.     Records  of  negro  and  Indian  graduates  and 
ex-students.     With  historical  and  personal  sketches  and  tes- 
32964—0(5 2 


10  LIBRAKY    OF    CONGRESS 

timony  on  important  race  questions  from  within  and  with 
out.     Illustrated  with  views  and  maps. 

Hampton:  Normal  school  press,  1893.  v,  (3),  520,  (8}  pp. 
Frontispiece  (Folded plate}.  Folded  maps.  8°. 

Haynes,  G.  H.     Representation  in  state  legislatures.     The  Southern 
states. 

(In  American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.     Annals,  vol. 
16,  pp.  93-119.     Philadelphia,  1900.) 

Herbert,  Hilary  A.,  and  others.     Why  the  solid  South?   or,  recon 
struction  and  its  results. 
Baltimore:  R.  H.  Woodward  dk  co.,  1890.     xvii,  452  pp.  16°. 

Hoar,  George  Frisbie.     The  opportunity  of  the  colored  leader.     An 

address  to  the  law  class  of  Howard  university,  189-i. 
Washington:  Howard  university  press,  189 4.     17  pp.     8°. 

Hoffman,  Frederick  L.     Race  traits  and  tendencies  of  the  American 

negro. 

Published  for  the  American  economic  association  by  the  Mac- 
millan  company,  New  York,  [1896].  329  pp.  8°.  (Amer 
ican  economic  association.  Publications,  vol.  11,  nos.  1,  2 
and  3.} 

Ingle,  Edward.     The  negro  in  the  District  of  Columbia. 

(In  Johns  Hopkins  University  studies  in  historical  and  political 
science.     Eleventh  series,  3-4,  March-April,  1893,  pp.  93-202.  8°. ) 

Southern  sidelights.     A  picture  of  social  and  economic  life  in 

the  South  a  generation  before  the  war. 
New  York:   Thomas  Y.  Crowell  &  company,  [1896].     (6),  373 

pp.     12Q.     (Library  of  economics  and  politics,  no.  10.) 

Johnson,  Edward  A.      History  of    negro   soldiers   in  the  Spanish- 
American  war,  and  other  items  of  interest. 

Raleigh,  N.  C. :  Capital  printing  co. .  1899.  147pp.  Plates. 
Portrait.  8°. 

Kettell,  Thomas  Prentice.     Southern  wealth  and  Northern  profits,  as 

exhibited  in  statistical  facts  and  official  figures:   showing 

the  necessity  of  union  to  the  future  prosperity  and  welfare 

of  the  Republic. 

New  York:    George  W.  cfe  John  A.  Wood,  1860.     173pp.     8°. 

Laws,  J.   Bradford.     The  negroes  of   Cinclare  central  factory  and 
Calumet  plantation,  Louisiana. 

(In United  States.    Department  of  Labor.    Bulletin  no.  38,  pp.  95-120. 
Washington,  1902.     8°.) 

Le  Conte,  Joseph.     The  race  problem  in  the  South. 

( In  Brooklyn  ethical  association.     Man  and  the  state.     Studies  in 
applied  sociology,  pp.  349-402.     New  York,  1892.     8°.) 


LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    THE    NEGKO    QUESTION  11 

Love,  John  L.     The  disfranchisement  of  the  negro. 

Washington,  D.  C. :  Published  by  the  Academy,  1899.  (#), 
27  pp.  8°.  (The  American  negro  academy.  Qccaswnal 
papers,  no.  6.) 

Mayo,  A.  D.  The  opportunity  and  obligation  of  the  educated  class 
of  the  colored  race  in  the  southern  states. 

(In  United  States.     Commissioner  of  Education.     Report,  1898-99, 
vol.  1,  pp.  1227-1246.     Washington,  1900.     8°.) 

-  Third  estate  at  the  South.     An  address  delivered  before  the 
American  social  science  association  at   Saratoga,   N.    Y., 
Sept.  2,  1890. 
Boston:    G.  II.  Ellis,  1890.     24pp.     8°. 

Miller,  Kelly.     "The  primary  needs  of  the  negro  race;"  an  address 
delivered  before  the  alumni  association  of  the  Hampton 
normal  and  agricultural  institute,  June  14,  1899. 
Washington,!).  C.:  Howard  university  press,  1899.     18pp. 

8°. 

A   review   of    Hoffman's   race   traits   and  tendencies   of   the 

American  negro. 

Washington,  D.  C.:  Published  by  tJie  Academy,  1897.  36 
pp.  8°.  (American  negro  academy.  Occasional  papers, 
no.  1.} 

Morgan,  John  T.  Negro  suffrage  in  the  South.  Mr.  Pritchard's  res 
olution.  Speech  in  the  Senate  of  the  United  States,  Jan 
uary  8,  1900. 

Washington,  1900.     16pp.    8°. 
Cover-title. 

Morgan,  Thomas  J.     The  negro  in  America,  and  the  ideal  American 

republic. 

Philadelphia:  American  Baptist  publishing  society.  [1898]. 
203  pp.  12°. 

Nash,  Charles  E.     The  status  of  the  negro,  from  a  negro's  standpoint, 

in  his  own  dialect. 

Little  Rock,  Ark. :    Tunnah  cfc  Pittard,  1900.     32  pp.     Illus 
trations.     12°. 
National  negro  business  league.     Proceedings  of  the  first  meeting, 

held  in  Boston,  Massachusetts,  August  23  and  24,  1900. 
[J.  R.  Hamm,  publisher,  Hoston,  1901.]     279  pp.     Plates. 
Portrait.     8°. 

Nieboer,  H.   J.      Slavery   as   an    industrial    system.       Ethnological 

researches. 
The  Hague:  Martinus  Nijhof,  1900.     xwvii,  (!},  474 pp.    8°. 


12  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Northrop,  Henry  Davenport,  Joseph  R.  Gay  Northrop,  and  I.  Gar 
land  Perm.  The  southern  college  of  life  and  universal  edu 
cator;  being  a  manual  of  self -improvement  and  guide  to 
success  for  the  colored  race. 

Philadelphia,  Pa.:  National  publishing  <%>.,  [190%].  (6), 
17-164,  %ii,  \iii\ — xviii,  700,  (8),  mi  pp.  Illustrations. 
Plates.  Portraits.  Map.  8°. 

Pell,  Edward  Leigh.  The  bright  side  of  humanity;  glimpses  of  life 
in  every  land,  showing  the  distinctive  noble  traits  of  all 
races. 

Richmond,   Va.:   The  B.  F.  Johnson  publishing  co.,  [1900], 
602  pp.  Illustrations.  Plates  (partly  colored).  Portraits.  8°. 
The  American  negro,  pp.  303-343. 

Penn,  I.  Garlarid,  and  J.  W.  E.  Bowen.  The  united  negro :  his  prob 
lems  and  his  progress.  Containing  the  addresses  and  pro 
ceedings  the  Negro  young  people's  Christian  and  educa 
tional  congress,  held  August  6-11,  1902. 
Atlanta,  Ga.:  D.  E.  Luth&r  publishing  co.,  1902.  xxx,  600 
pj).  Plates.  Portraits.  12°. 

X 

Pierce,  Edward  L.  Enfranchisement  and  citizenship.  Addresses 
and  papers.  Edited  by  A.  W.  Stevens. 

Boston:  Roberts  lr other s,1896.     vii,  (£),  397pp.     8°. 

Chapter5,  pp.  142-184,  contains  "Two  systems  of  reconstruction." 

Pike,  James  S.  The  prostrate  state:  South  Carolina  under  negro 
government. 

New  York:  D.  Appleton  A  CQ.,  187 4.     279pp.     12°. 

[Presley,  Samuel  C.]     Negro  lynching  in  the  South.     Treating  of  the 
.  negro,  his   past   and  ^.present   condition,   of   the  cause  of 
lynching,  and  of  tjje  means  to  remedy  the  evil. 
Washington,  Bxttf:     T.   W.    Cadick,  1899.      64  pp.     Illus 
trations.     8°. 

Prichard,  Hesketh.     Where  black  rules  white;  a  journey  across  and 

about  Hayti. 

Westminister:  Archibald;  Constable   c§  co.,  1900.     (10),  288 
pj>.     Illustrations.     Plates.     8°. 

Richings,  G.  F.     An  album  of  negro  educators. 

\n.  p.,  1900.]     48 pp.     Illustrations.      Oil.  32°. 

Riley,  Jerome  R.     The  philosophy  of  negro  suffrage. 

Hartford:    American  piillishing    company,   1895.     110  pp. 
Portrait.     8°. 


LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    THE    NEGKO    QUESTION  13 

Royall,  William  L.     History  of  the  Virginia  debt  controversy.     The 

negro's  vicious  influence  in  politics. 
Richmond,  Va.:  Geo.  M.  West,  publisher,  1897.     lllpp.    12°. 

Sadler,  M.  E.     The  education  of  the  coloured  race. 

(In  Great  Britain.  Board  of  education.  Special  reports  on  educa 
tional  subjects,  vol.  11.  Education  in  the  United  States  of  Amer 
ica,  part  2,  pp.  521-560.  London,  1902.  8°.) 

Slater  (John  F.)  fund  for  the  education  of  freedmen.     Proceedings 

of  the  trustees. 
Baltimore:  J.  Murphy  <&  co.,  1892-1901.     6  vols.     8°. 

The  "Occasional  papers"  of  the  Slater  fund,  nos.  1-6,  are  reprinted 
in  the  United  States.  Commissioner  of  education.  Report, 
1894-95,  vol.  2,  pp.  1366-1424. 

Social  and  physical  condition  of  negroes  in  cities.  Report  of  an  inves 
tigation  under  the  direction  of  Atlanta  university:  and 
Proceedings  of  the  second  conference  for  the  study  of 
problems  concerning  negro  city  life,  held  at  Atlanta  uni 
versity,  May  25-26,  1897. 

Atlanta,  Ga. :  Atlanta  university  press,  1897.     72,J.4PP-    #°- 
(Atlanta  university.     Publications,  no.  2.) 

Southern  society  for  the  promotion  of  the  study  of  race  conditions 
and  problems  in  the  South.  Race  problems  of  the  South. 
Report  of  the  proceedings  of  the  first  annual  conference 
...  at  Montgomery,  Alabama,  May  8,  9,  10,  1900. 
Richmond:  B.  F.  Johnson  publishing  company,  [1900].  2^0 
pp.  8°. 

Contents:  "Montgomery's  welcome  to  the  visitors  and  delegates," 
E.  B.  Joseph;  "The  welcome  of^Alabama,"  Joseph  F.  Johnston; 
s<  The  idea  and  history  of  the  conference,"  J.  B.  Gaston;  "The 
problems  that  present  themselves,"  Hilary  A.  Herbert;  "The 
franchise  in  the  South,"  Alfred  Moore  Waddell;  John  T.  Graves; 
William  A.  McCockle;  " Popular  education  in  the  South,"  Hollia 

B.  Frissell;  Julius  D.  Dreher;  J.  L.  M.  Curry;  "  The  negro  in  rela 
tion  to   religion;"    "Expenditures   for    negro    evangelization — 
Principles  and  methods;"   "Which  is  the  wiser  form  of  religious 
work  among  negroes — that  controlled  by  white  agencies,  or  that 
administered  by  negroes?"  D.  Clay  Lilly,  W.  A.  Guerry;  "What 
are  the  religious  conditions  of  the  negro  to-day,  compared  with 
those  of  ante-bellum  days — the  differences  and  their  significance?" 

C.  C.  Brown;  "Should  we  advise  the  raising  of  the  standard  of 
ordination  for  the  negro  clergy?"  J.  R.  Slattery;  Lynching  as  a 
penalty:    "The  punishment  of  crimes  against  women — existing 
legal  remedies  and  their  sufficiency,"  Alex.  C.  King;  "  Is  lynch 
ing  advisable?"  Clifton  C.  Breckinridge;  The  negro  and  the  social 
order:   "The  sacrifice  of  a  race,"  Paul  B.  Barringer;  "The  negro 
aa  an  American  problem,"  W.  Bourke  Cockran;  "A  partial  list 
of  books  and  pamphlets  on  the  negro  question  in  the  United 
States,"  S.  M.  Lindsay,  pp.  224-240. 


14  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Spahr,  Charles  B.     America's  working  people. 

Longmans,  Green  andco.,  New  York,  London  [etc.].,  1900.  m, 
(2),  261pp.  12°. 

The  negro  as  an  industrial  factor,  pp.  72-90. 
The  negro  as  a  citizen;  pp.  91-119. 

[Stetson,  George  R.]    The  southern  negro  as  he  is.    By  G.  R.  S. 
Boston:    G.  H.  Ellis,  1877.     32pp.     8°. 

Stone,  Alfred  Holt.     The  negro  in  the  Yazoo-Mississippi  delta. 

(In  American  economic  association.     Publications,  3d  series,  vol  3, 
pp.  235-272.     New  York,  1902.     8°. ) 

Sutton,  Edwin  H.     Negro  problem. 

{Baltimore,  1889.}     71pp.     12°. 

Thorn,  William  Taylor.  The  negroes  of  Litwalton,  Virginia:  a  social 
study  of  the  "  Oyster  negro." 

(In  United  States.     Department  of  Labor.     Bulletin,  no.  37,  pp. 
1115-1170.     Washington,  1901.     8°.) 

The  negroes  of  Sandy  Spring,  Maryland:  a  social  study. 

(In  United  States.     Department  of  Labor.     Bulletin,  no.  32,  pp. 
43-102.    Washington,  1901.     8°.) 

Thomas,  William  Hannibal.  The  American  negro,  what  he  was,  what 
he  is,  and  what  he  may  become.  A  critical  and  practical 
discussion. 

New  York:  The  Macmillan  company,  1901.  xxvi,  (#),  440 
pp.  8°. 

Thrasher,  Max  Bennett.     Tuskegee:  its  story  and  its  work.     With  an 

introduction  by  Booker  T.  Washington. 

Boston:  Small,  Maynard  <&  company,  1900.  xvi,  215  pp. 
Plates.  Portrait.  12°. 

Tillinghast,  Joseph  Alexander.     The  negro  in  Africa  and  America. 

Published  for  the  American  economic  association  by  the  Mac 
millan  company,  New  York.  [1902].  m,  231  pp.  8°. 
(American  economic  association.  Publications,  third  series, 
vol.  3,  no.  2.  May,  1902.} 

Part  I :  The  negro  in  West  Africa. 
Part  II :  The  negro  under  American  slavery. 
Part  III:  The  negro  as  a  free  citizen. 
Bibliography,  pp.  229-231. 

Tourgee,  Albion  W.     An  appeal  to  Caesar. 

New  York:  Fords,  Howard  and  Hulbert,  1884.     1$%  pp.  16°. 


LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    THE    "NEGRO    QUESTION  15 

United  States.  o5th  Congress,  2d  session.  Senate  document  no.  114,. 
Protest  of  citizens  of  Louisiana,  etc.  Letter  from  the 
attorney  -general,  transmitting,  in  response  to  resolution  of 
the  Senate  of  January  26,  1898,  copy  of  a  protest  of  citizens 
of  Louisiana  against  violations  of  the  Constitution  by  the 
acting  circuit  judge  and  the  district  attorney  of  the  United 
States  for  the  eastern  district  of  Louisiana  by  the  exclusion 
from  service  on  juries  in  the  United  States  courts  of  duly 
qualified  citizens  on  account  of  color.  Feb.  4,  1898.  14 
pp.  8°.  ' 


Senate  document  no.  114,  pt.  2.  Exclusion  of  colored 
persons  from  juries  in  United  States  courts  in  Louisiana. 
Letter  from  the  attorney-general,  transmitting,  in  further 
response  to  resolution  of  the  Senate  of  Jan.  26,  1898,  copies 
of  answers  filed  by  the  district  judge  and  the  attorney  of 
the  United  States,  referred  to  in  the  protest  concerning 
alleged  exclusion  of  colored  persons  from  service  upon 
juries  in  the  United  States  court  in  the  district  of  Louisiana. 
Mar.  7,  1898.  5  pp.  8°. 

Bureau  of  Education.     Education  of  the  colored  race. 

(In   Report  of  commissioner  for   1894-95,  vol.  2,  pp.   1331-1366. 
Washington,  1896.     8°.) 

The  Slater  fund  and  the  education  of  the  negro. 

(In   Report   of   commissioner   for   1894-95,  vol.  2,  pp.    1367-1424. 
Washington,  1896.     8°.) 

Education  of  the  colored  race. 

(In   Report   of   commissioner   for   1895-96,  vol.   2,   pp.    2081-2115. 
Washington,  1897.     8°.) 

Education  of  the  colored  race. 

(In  Report  of   commissioner   for   1896-97,  vol.   2,   pp.   2295-2333. 
Washington,  1898.     8°.) 

Education  of  the  colored  race. 

(In   Report   of   commissioner   for  1897-98,  vol.   2,   pp.   2479-2507. 
Washington,  1899.     8°.) 

-  The  future  of  the  colored  race. 

(In  Report  of  the  commissioner  for  1898-99,  vol.  1,  pp.  1227-1248. 
Washington,  1900.     8°.) 

Department  of  Labor.     Condition  of  the  negro  in  various  cities. 
(  In  its  Bulletin,  vol.  2,  May  1897,  pp.  257-369.    Washington,  1897. 


16  LIBKAKY    OF    COJSTGKESS 

Washington,  Booker  T.     Education  of  the  negro. 

( In  Butler,  Nicholas  Murray,  ed.  Education  in  the  United  States, 
[vol.  2],  pp.  893-936.  Albany,  N.  Y.  1900.  8°.  United  States 
commission  to  the  Paris  exposition  of  1900.  Department  of 
education.  Monograph  18. ) 

-  The  future  of  the  American  negro. 

Boston:   Small,  Maynard  &  company,  1899.     (2),  x,  3,  294 
pp.     Portrait.     12°. 

An  autobiography;    the  story  of    my  life  and  work.      Intro 
duction  by  Dr.  J.  L.  M.  Curry. 

Toronto,    Ont.,  JVaperville,    III.    [etc.]:   J.   L.  Niclwls  da  co. 
[1901].      Jf55  pp.      frontispiece.     Plates.     Portraits.     8°. 

-  Up  from  slavery.     An  autobiography. 

New     York:    Doubleday,    Page   &   co.,   1901.     ix,   330  pp. 
Portrait.     8°. 

-  De  esclavo  acatedratico;  autobiografia  de  Booker  T.  Washing 

ton;  vertida  del   ingles   al   espanol   por   Alfredo   Elias  y 
Pujol. 

Nueva   York:  D.  Appleton  y  compania,  1902.     mi,  (1),  297 
pp.     Frontispiece.     Plates.     Portraits.     12°. 

West,  Max.  The  fourteenth  amendment  in  the  light  of  recent 
decisions. 

(In  Yale  review,  vol.  8,  Feb.  1900,  pp.  385-402.) 

Williams,  Fannie  Barrier.  A  new  negro  for  a  new  century;  an 
accurate  and  up-to-date  record  of  the  upward  struggles  of 
the  negro  race. 

Chicago:      American    publishi/tig     h&use,    [1900.]      J$8  pp. 
Portraits.     8°. 

Willcox,  Walter  F.     Negro  criminality. 

(In  American  social  science  association.  Journal,  no.  37,  pp.  78-98, 
1899.) 


SUPPLEMENTARY   LIST  OF   BOOKS  ON   THE    NEGRO  QUESTION 

Alexander,  William  T.  History  of  the  colored  race  in  America. 
Containing  also  their  ancient  and  modern  life  in  Africa  .  .  . 
the  origin  and  development  of  slavery  in  the  Old  world, 
and  its  introduction  on  the  American  continent;  the  slave 
trade;  slavery,  and  its  abolition  in  Europe  and  America. 
The  civil  war,  emancipation,  education  and  advancement  of 
the  colored  race,  their  civil  and  political  rights. 
Kansas  City,  Mo.:  Palmetto  publishing co.,  1887.  (4),  600  p2J- 

Plates.     Portraits.     8°. 

Allen,  William  G.  The  American  prejudice  against  color.  An 
authentic  narrative,  showing  how  easily  the  nation  got  into 
an  uproar. 

London  [etc.}:  W.  and  F.  G.  Cash  [etc.],  1853.     (4),  107,  (1) 

pp.     16°.     (Tracts.     [Cambridge,  etc.,  1840?]-59.     [no.  4]) 

American  negro  academy,  Washington,  D.  C.     The  negro  and  the 

elective  franchise.     A  series  of  papers  and  a  sermon. 
Washington,  D.  C. :   The  Academy ',  1905 '.     85pp.     8°.     (Oc 
casional  papers,  no.  11} 

CONTENTS. — 1.  Meaning  and  need  of  the  movement  to  reduce  south 
ern  representation,  by  A.  H.  Grimke. — 2.  The  penning  of  the 
negro  <the  negro  vote  in  the  states  of  the  revised  constitutions> 
by  C.  C.  Cook. — 3.  The  negro  vote  in  the  states  whose  constitu 
tions  have  not  been  specifically  revised,  by  John  Hope. — 4.  The 
potentiality  of  the  negro  vote,  North  and  West,  by  John  L. 
Love. — 5.  Migration  and  distribution  of  the  negro  population  as 
affecting  the  elective  franchise,  by  Kelly  Miller. — 6.  The  negro 
and  his  citizenship,  by  F.  J.  Grimke. 

-  Occasional  papers. 

Washington,  D.   C. :  Published  by  the  Academy,  1897-1905. 
11  nos.     8°. 

CONTENTS. — No.  1.  MILLER,  K.  A  review  of  Hoffman  s  race  traits 
and  tendencies  of  the  American  negro,  1897;  2.  Du  Bois,  W.  E.  B. 
The  conservation  of  races,  1897;  3.  CRUMMELL,  A.  Civilization 
the  primal  need  of  the  race,  and  The  attitude  of  the  American 
mind  toward  the  negro  intellect,  1898;  4.  COOK,  C.  C.  A  com 
parative  study  of  the  negro  problem,  1899;  5.  STEWARD,  T.  G. 
How  the  Black  St.  Domingo  legion  saved  the  patriot  army  in 
the  siege  of  Savannah,  1779,  1899;  6.  LOVE,  J.  L.  The  disfran- 
chisement  of  the  negro,  1899;  7.  GRIMKE,  A.  H.  Right  on  the 
scaffold,  or  the  martyrs  of  1822,  1901;  8.  SCARBOROUGH,  W.  S. 
The  educated  negro  and  his  mission,  1903;  9.  CROMWELL,  John  W. 
The  early  negro  convention  movement,  1904;  10.  FADUMA,  O. 
The  defects  of  the  negro  church,  1904;  11.  The  negro  and  the 
elective  franchise,  1905. 
32964—06 3  sZ\'r'-  17 


°F  .v*y 

PAL'FOPN^X 


18  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Armistead,  W.  S.  The  negro  is  a  man;  a  reply  to  Professor  Charles 
Carroll's  book  "The  negro  is  a  beast;  or,  In  the  image  of 
God." 

Tifton,  Ga. :  Armistead  &  Vickers,  1903.    xxiv,  o^  pp.     Por 
trait.     Plates  (partly  colored).     8°. 

Armstrong   association,  New   York.     The   work   and   influence   of 
Hampton.     Proceedings  of  a  meeting  held  in  New  York 
city  Februanr  12,  1904,  under  the  direction  of  the  Arm 
strong   association.     With  the  addresses  of   Mr.  Andrew 
Carnegie,  chairman;  President  Charles  W.  Eliot;  Dr.  H. 
B.  Frissell;  and  Dr.  Booker  T.  Washington. 
[New  York:   The  Lehmaier  press,  1901,. ~]     38pp.     8°. 

Atkinson,  Edward.     The  race  problem:  its  possible  solution. 

{Baltimore?  190  If}     8* pp.     8°. 

Cover-title. 

« 

In  double  columns. 

Reprinted  from  Manufacturers'  record  of  Baltimore,  of  December 
19,  1901. 

Atlanta  university.     Publications. 

Atlanta,    Ga.:    Atlanta    university   press,    1896-1904-      10 
vols.     8°. 

CONTENTS. — No.  1.  Conference  for  investigation  of  city  problems, 
Atlanta.  Mortality  among  negroes  in  cities,  1896;  2ded.  Abridged, 
1903;  2.  Social  and  physical  condition  of  negroes  in  cities,  1897; 
3.  Du  Bois,  W.  E.  B.  ed.  Some  efforts  of  American  negroes  for 
their  own  social  betterment,  1898;  4.  The  negro  in  business,  1899; 
5.  The  college-bred  negro,  1900;  2d  ed.  abridged  ed.  1902;  6.  The 
negro  common  school,  1901;  (Un-numbered)  Select  bibliography 
of  the  American  negro,  1901;  7.  The  negro  artisan,  1902;  8.  The 
negro  church,  1903;  9.  Some  notes  on  negro  crime,  particularly 
in  Georgia,  1904. 

Boas,  Franz.     Human  faculty  as  determined  by  race. 

(In  American  association  for  the  advancement  of  science.  Proceed 
ings  for  the  forty-third  meeting  held  at  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  August, 
1894,  pp.  301-327.  Salem,  1895.  8°.) 

"By  far  the  ablest  plea  yet  made  for  the  'backward  races'  is  to  be 
found  in  the  address  of  Dr.  Franz  Boas  on  Human  Faculty  as 
Determined  by  Race."  W.  B.  Smith.  The  Color  line,  New  York, 
1905,  page  111. 

Brandt,  Lilian.     The  negroes  of  St.  Louis. 

(In  American  statistical  association.  Publications,  vol.  8,  pp.  203-268. 
Boston,  1903.  8°.) 

Brooks,  Calvin  Herlock.     ^he  race  problem  solved,  or,  A  reply  to  a 

book  entitled,  "The  negro  a  beast,"  by  Chas.  Carroll. 
Elgin,  Tex. :    W.  C.  Smith  &  sons,  1901.     (0),  74  pp.     12°. 


SUPPLEMENTARY    LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    NEGRO    QUESTION         19 

Brorup,  Rasmus  Peterson.     The  struggle  for  America. 

Fitzgerald,  Ga.:  North  and  South  pvbUshing  co.^  1904-     9$ 
pp.     8°. 

"The  South  and  the  negro,"  pp.  65-75. 

Brousseau,  Kate.     L'education  des  negres  aux  Etats-Unis. 
Paris:  Felix  Alcan,  1904.     xvi,  396,  (1)  pp.     8°. 
Bibliographic,  pp.  333-391. 

Brown,  William  Wells.  The  negro  in  the  American  rebellion;  his 
heroism  and  his  fidelity. 

Boston:  Lee  &  Shepard,  1867.     xvi,  380  pp.     12°. 

Bullard,  II.  L.     The  negro  volunteer:  some  characteristics. 

(In  Military  service  institution  of  the  United  States.     Journal,  vol. 
29,  July,  1901,  pp.  29-39.) 

Burgess,  John  William.     The  middle  period,  1817-1858. 

New   York:    C.  Scribner^s  sons,  1897.     xvi,  544-  PP-     Maps. 
12°.     (The  American  history  series,     vol.  4-) 
Bibliography:  pp.  497-502. 

Reconstruction  and  the  Constitution,  1866-1876. 
New  York:    Charles  Scribner's  sons,  1902.     xii,  (2),  3J/2  pp. 
12°.     (The  American  history  series.} 

"  '  Carpet-bag'  and  negro  domination  in  the  southern  states  between 
1868  and  1876,"  pp.  247-279. 

Campbell,  Sir  George.     White  and  black:  the  outcome  of  a  visit  to 

the  United  States. 
London:    Chatto  <&  'Windus^  1879.     osvii,  (1),  441  PP-     #°- 

Carroll,  Charles.  ''The  negro  a  beast;"  or,  "In  the  image  of  God;" 
The  reasoner  of  the  age,  the  revelator  of  the  century!  The 
Bible  as  it  is!  The  negro  and  his  relation  to  the  human 
family ! 

St.  Louis,  Mo.:  American  hook  &  Bible  house,  1900.     382 
pp.     Plates.     8°. 

Charities.     The  negro  in  the  cities  of  the  North. 

New   York:   The   Charity  organization  society,  C1905.      (4), 
96  pp.     Illustrations.     Plates.     4°' 

At  head  of  title:  Charities  publication  committee. 
Keprint  of  Charities,  October  7,  1905. 

Conference  for  education  in  the  South.    2d,  Capon  Springs,  W.  Va. 

Proceedings,  1899. 

Raleigh,    N.    C.:    Edwards   &  Broughton,  printers,    1899. 
109pp.     Portrait.     Plates.     8°. 

3d,  Capon  Springs,  W.  Va.     Proceedings,  1900. 

Raleigh,   N.    C.:    Printing   office,    St.    Augustine's    school, 
[1900].     108pp.     8°. 


20 

Conference  for  education  in  the  South.    Jfth,  Winston -Salem,  N.  C. 

Proceedings.     April  18,  19  and  20,  1901. 
[Jlarrisburg,  Pa.:  Mount  Pleasant  press],  1901.     iv,  182  pp. 
Plates.    '8°. 

5th,  Athens,  Ga.     Proceedings.     April  24, -25  and  2(3,  1902. 
[I&ioxville,    Tenn. :     Gaut-  Ogden   company,  printers],  1902. 
viii,  102  pp.     Plates.     8°. 

6th,    Richmond- Charlottesmlle,     Va.,     1903.       Proceedings. 

Richmond,   Va.,   April   22d   to   April    24th,   and   at   the 

University  of  Virginia,  April  25th. 
\_New  York:    Committee  on  publication^,  1903.     269  pp.     8°. 

7th,  Birmingham,  Ala.     Proceedings.     April  26th  to  April 

28th,  1904. 
New  York:  [Wynkoop,  Hallenbeck,  Crawford  co.,  printers], 

1904.     183,  (I)  pp.     8°. 

Conference  for  investigation  of  city  problems.     1st,  Atlanta,  1896. 
Mortality   among   negroes   in    cities.      Proceedings,   May 

26-27,  1896. 

Atlanta,  Ga.:  Atlanta  university  press,  1896.     51  pp.     8C. 
(Atlanta  university  publications,  no.  1} 

No.  1  in  a  volume  lettered:  Atlanta  university  publications,  1896- 
1901. 

2d  ed. — abridged.     Ed.  by  Thomas  N.  Chase. 

Atlanta,  Ga. :  Atlanta  university  press,  1903.  24  pp.  8°. 
(Atlanta-  university  publications,  no.  1} 

Cromwell,  John  W.     The  early  negro  convention  movement. 

Washington,  D.  C. :  Published  by  the  Academy,  1904-  23  pp. 
8°.  (The  American  negro  academy.  Occasional  papers, 
no.  9.) 

Crummell,  Alexander.  Civilization  the  primal  need  of  the  race,  inaugu 
ral  address,  March  5,  1897;  The  attitude  of  the  American 
mind  toward  the  negro  intellect,  Address,  Dec.  28,  1897. 
Washington,  D.  C.:  Published  by  the  Academy,  1898.  19  pp. 
8°.  (T/ie  American  negro  academy.  Occasional  papers, 
no.  3.} 

Cutler,  James  Elbert.     Lynch-law ;  an  investigation  into  the  history 

of  lynching  in  the  United  States. 
New   York,  London  [etc.]:  Longmans,   Green,  and  co.,  1905. 

xiv,  287  pp.     8°. 

Proposed  remedies  for  lynching. 

1904.     CO,  194-412  pp.     8°. 

Reprinted  from  Yale  review,  vol.  13,  August,  1904. 


SUPPLEMENTARY    LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    NEGKO    QUESTION        21 

Dabney,  Charles  William.     The  problem  in  the  South. 

New  York:  General  education  board,  1903.     21,  (1)  pp.     8°. 
Cover-title. 

An  address  before  the  Southern  educational  association,  Columbia, 
S.  C.,  Dec.  28,  1901. 

Du  Bois,  William  Edward  Burghardt.  The  negro  artisan.  Report  of 
a  social  study  made  under  the  direction  of  Atlanta  univer 
sity;  together  with  the  Proceedings  of  the  seventh  confer 
ence  for  the  study  of  the  negro  problems,  held  at  Atlanta 
university,  on  May  27th,  1902. 

Atlanta  university  press,  Atlanta,  Ga.,  1902.  192  pp.  8°. 
(The  Atlanta  university  publications,  no.  7) 

The  negro  artisan. 

(In  Commons,  John  R.,  ed.     Trade  unionism  and  labor  problems, 

pp.  349-370.     Boston,  1905.     8°.  ) 

"Extracts  from  The  Negro  artisan:  Report  of  a  social  study  made 
under  the  direction  of  Atlanta  University,  1902." 

The  negro  church;  report  of  a  social  study  made  under  the 
direction  of  Atlanta  university;  together  with  the  Proceed 
ings  of  the  eighth  Conference  for  the  study  of  the  negro 
problems,  held  at  Atlanta  university,  May  26th,  1903. 

Atlanta,   Ga.,  The  Atlanta  university  press,  1903.     viii,  212 
pp.     8^.     (The  Atlanta  university  publications,  no.  8) 
"Select  bibliography  of  negro  churches":  pp.  vi-viii. 

The  problem  of  housing  the  negro. 

(In  Southern  workman,  vol.  30,  July-Dec.,  1901,  pp.  390  ...  -688, 

vol.  31,  Feb.,  1902,  pp.  65-72.) 
Contents. — I.  The  elements  of  the  problem;  IT.  The  home  of  the 

slave;  III.  The  home  of  the  country  freednian;  IV.  The  home  of 

the  village  negro;  V.  The  southern  city  negro  of  the  lower  class; 

VI.  The  southern  city  negro  of  the  better  class. 

Some  notes  on  negro  crime,  particularly  in  Georgia;  report  of 
a  social  study  made  under  the  direction  of  Atlanta  univer 
sity;  together  with  the  proceedings  of  the  Ninth  conference 
for  the  stud}7  of  the  negro  problems,  held  at  Atlanta  uni 
versity,  May  24,  1904. 

Atlanta,  Ga. :  The  Atlanta  university  press,  190^.  viii,  68 
pp.  Diagrams.  8^.  (The  Atlanta  university  publications, 
no.  9) 

CONTEXTS. — The  problem  of  crime  (F.  B.  Sanborn) — Crime  and 
slavery. — Crime  and  the  census. — Extent  of  negro  crime. — Crime 
in  cities  (by  M.  N.  Work) — Crime  in  Georgia. — Atlanta  and 
Savannah  (by  II.  H.  Proctor  and  M.  N.  Work)— Crime  in 
Augusta  (by  A.  G.  Coombs  and  L.  D.  Davis) — What  negroes  think 
of  crime. — Causes  of  negro  crime. — Some  conclusions. — The  Ninth 
conference. — Resolutions. — Index. 
Bibliography:  pp.  vi-viii. 


22  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Du  Bois,  William  Edward  Burghardt.    The  suppression  of  the  African 

slave-trade  to  the  United  States  of  America,  1638-1870. 
New  York:  Longmans,  Green,  and  co.,  1896.     xi,  (1),  335  pp. 
8°.     (Harvard  historical  studies,  vol.  1.) 

The  souls  of  black  folk;  essays  and  sketches. 

Chicago:  A.  C.  McClurg  &  co.,  1903.  viii,  (2),  %61t,  (2)  pp. 
8°. 

CONTENTS. — Of  our  spiritual  strivings. — Of  the  dawn  of  freedom. — 
Of  Mr.  Booker  T.  Washington  and  others. — Of  the  meaning  of 
progress.— Of  the  wings  of  Atalanta. — Of  the  training  of  black 
men. — Of  the  black  belt. — Of  the  quest  of  the  golden  fleece. — 
Of  the  sons  of  master  and  man. — Of  the  faith  of  the  fathers. — Of 
the  passing  of  the  first-born. — Of  Alexander  Crummell. — Of  the 
coming  of  John. — The  sorrow  songs. 

Eastman,  Henry  Parker.     The  negro,  his  origin,  history  and  destiny ; 

containing  a  reply  to  "The  negro  a  beast." 
Boston:    Eastern   publishing    company,    [°190<5].      44-8  pp. 
Plates.     Portraits.     8°. 

Biographical  introduction  by  J.  M.  McLeod. 

Eaton,  Isabel.  Special  report  on  negro  domestic  service  in  the  sev 
enth  ward,  Philadelphia. 

(In  Du  Bois,  W.  E.  B.,  The  Philadelphia  negro;  a  social  study,  pp. 
425-509.  Philadelphia,  1899.'  8°.) 

Elwang,  William  Wilson.  The  negroes  of  Columbia,  Missouri;  a  con 
crete  study  of  the  race  problem;  with  a  preface  by  Charles 
A.  Ellwood. 

[Columbia,  Mo.]:  Dept.  of  sociology,  University  of  Missouri, 
1904.  vii,  69  pp.  Plates.  Map.  8°. 

Fadunia,  Orishatukeh.     The  defects  of  the  negro  church. 

Washington,  D.  C. :  Published  by  the  Academy,  1904-  17  pp. 
8°.  (The  American  negro  academy.  Occasional  papers, 
no.  10.) 

Fleming,  Walter  Lynwood.  Civil  war  and  reconstruction  in  Ala 
bama. 

New  York:  The  Columbia  imiversity  press,  The  Macmillan 
company,  agents;  [etc.,  etc.]  1905.  xxiii,  815  pp.  Illus 
trations.  Plates.  Portraits.  Facsimiles.  Maps.  8°. 

Foard,  John  Frederick.  North  America  and  Africa,  their  past, 
present  and  future,  and  key  to  the  negro  problem.  [3d  ed.] 

\_8tatesville,  N.  C. :  Brady  the  printer,  190 4.}  67pp.  Plates. 
Portraits.  Facsimiles.  8°. 


SUPPLEMENTARY    LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    NEGKO    QUESTION         23 

Fowler,  William  Chauncey.  The  historical  status  of  the  negro  in 
Connecticut.  A  paper  read  before  the  New  Haven  colony 
historical  society.  Copied  from  the  Historical  magazine 
and  Notes  and  queries  concerning  the  antiquities,  history 
and  biography  of  America,  vols.  xxiii-xxiv,  1874-1875. 
Charleston*  8.  C. :  Walker,  Evans  efe  Cogswell  co. ,  1901.  81 
pp.  8°. 

G-aines,  Wesley  J.     The  negro  and  the  white  man. 

Philadelphia:  A.  M.   E.  publishing   house,  1897.     218  pp. 

12°. 

Galloway,  Charles   Betts.     The  South  and  the  negro.     An  address 
delivered  at  the  seventh  Annual  conference  for  education 
in  the  South,  Birmingham,  Ala.,  April  26,  1904. 
New  York:    The  Trustees,  1904-     16  pp.      #:.     (Trustees  of 
the  John  E.  Slate)1  fund.      Occasional  papers,  no.  11} 


(In  Conference  for  education  in  the  South.     7th,  Birmingham,  Ala., 
1904,  pp.  27-38.     New  York,  1904.     8°.) 

G-arner,  James  Wilford.     Reconstruction  in  Mississippi. 

Neiv  York:  The  Macmillan  company;  London:  Macmillan 
&  co.,  1901.  xiii,  (1),  422pp.  12°. 

G-ilman,  Daniel  Coit.  A  study  in  black  and  white.  An  address  at 
the  opening  of  the  Armstrong-Slater  trade  school  building, 
November  18,  1896. 

Baltimore:  The  Trustees  [J.  Murphy  c&  co.,  printers],  1897. 
14PP'  8°.  (Trustees  of  the  John  F.  Slater  fund.  Occa 
sional  papers,  no.  10} 

"Reported  by  the  'Southern  workman,'  and  printed  in  that  jour 
nal,  December,  1896."— p.  [5] 

Grady,  Benjamin  Franklin.  The  case  of  the  South  against  the  North: 
or  historical  evidence  justifying  the  southern  states  of  the 
American  union  in  their  long  controversy  with  the  northern 
states. 

J?dwards  <&  Broughton,    Raleigh,   N.    C1.,  1899.     xxix,   (3), 
345pp.     8°. 

G-rimke,  Francis  James.     The  lynching  of  negroes  in  the  South;  its 
causes  and  remedy.     [Sermons  delivered  in  Washington, 
D.  C.,  June  4th-25th,  1899.] 
[Washington?  1899 f]     (2),  81pp.     8°. 

Gunby,  A.  A.     Negro  education  in  the  south. 

New  Orleans:  II.  C.  Thomason,  1903.     66pp.     12°. 


24  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Hampton  negro  conference.     Proceedings. 

Hampton,  Va. :  Hampton  institute  press,  1898-1903.  6  vols. 
in  1.  8°. 

No.  2.  July  1898.  No.  3.  July  1899.  No.  4.  July  1900.  No.  5. 
July  1901.  No.  6.  July  1902.  No.  7.  July  1903. 

The  report  of  the  first  conference,  July  1897  is  contained  in  v.  26, 
No.  9  (Sept.  1897)  of  the  Southern  workman. 

CONTENTS. — No.  II:  Second  conference,  1898.  Address  of  welcome. 
H.  B.  Frissell.  Business  enterprises  as  conducted  by  colored  men. 
H.  E.  Baker.  Reaching  and  saving  the  negro.  John  W.  Lemon. 
A  remedy  for  the  excessive  mortality  of  the  negro.  F.  J.  Shadd. 
Temperance  and  the  negro  race.  Francis  J.  Grimke.  Some 
wasteful  practices  of  Southern  farmers.  C.  L.  Goodrich.  Some 
of  the  dangers  confronting  Southern  girls  in  the  North.  Mrs.  V. 
E.  Matthews.  The  development  of  stronger  womanhood.  Mrs. 
S.  B.  Stevens.  Work  being  done  for  girls  in  Southern  cities. 
Mrs.  Casper  Titus.  Sewing  in  the  public  schools.  Miss  C.  E. 
Syphax.  Co-operation  in  the  work  of  industrial  schools.  S.  G. 
Atkins.  How  to  hold  the  young  people  in  the  churches. 

No.  III.  Conference,  1899.  Suggestions  of  the  Committee  on  edu 
cation.  H.  M.  Browne.  Report  of  Committee  on  religion  and 
ethics.  Francis  J.  Grimke'.  Report  of  Committee  on  business 
and  labor.  Andrew  F.  Hilyer.  Report  of  Committee  on  vital 
statistics  and  sanitary  problems.  F.  J.  Shadd.  Report  of  Com 
mittee  on  statistics.  J.  W.  Cromwell.  Suggestions  of  Committee 
on  domestic  science.  Mrs.  V.  E.  Matthews.  The  burden  of  the 
educated  colored  woman.  Lucy  C.  Laney.  The  woman's  con 
ference.  Modern  industrialism  and  the  negroes  of  the  United 
States.  A.  H.  Grimk4.  The  negro  pulpit  and  its  responsibilities. 
Richard  Spiller.  A  few  hints  to  Southern  farmers.  G.  W.  Carver. 
The  educational  side  of  sewing.  Mary  S.  Woolman.  Negro 
business  enterprises  of  Hampton.  Harris  Barrett.  The  negro 
in  fiction  as  portrayer  and  portrayed.  W.  S.  Scarborough. 
Remarks  by  Dr.  R.  F.  Campbell.  Capital  and  labor  in  co 
operative  farming.  Alexander  Purves. 

No.  IV.  Conference,  1900.  Report  of  the  Committee  on  business 
and  labor  by  A.  F.  Hilyer;  The  economic  aspect  of  the  negro 
problem,  by  Matthew  Anderson;  Report  of  the  Committee  on 
domestic  economy,  by  Rosa  D.  Bowser;  The  negro's  duty  to 
himself,  by  W.  S.  Scarborough;  Report  of  Committee  on  religion 
and  ethics,  by  Francis  J.  Grimke  and  William  V.  Tumiell;  Report 
of  Committee  on  vital  statistics  and  sanitary  problems;  Negro 
criminality,  by  John  Henry  Smyth;  The  aim  of  negro  education, 
by  G.  N.  Grisham. 

No.  V.  Conference,  1901.  Opening  address.  Booker  T.  Washing 
ton.  Report  of  Committee  on  business  and  labor.  A.  F.  Hilyer. 
Public  spirit  among  our  people.  L.  H.  Reynolds.  Report  of 
Committee  on  domestic  economy.  Mrs.  Rosa  D.  Bowser.  The 
working  value  of  educational  ideals.  Marie  L.  Baldwin. 
The  proposed  disfranchisement  of  the  negro.  Win.  M.  Reid. 
The  relation  of  the  pastor  to  the  community.  G.  R.  Waller. 
Report  of  the  Committee  on  general  statistics.  J.  M.  Colson. 
Review  of  W.  Hannibal  Thomas'  book  "  The  American  negro." 
Kelly  Miller.  The  American  negro  exhibit  at  the  Paris  exposi 
tion.  Thomas  J.  Galloway. 


SUPPLEMENTARY    LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    NEGKO    QUESTION         25 

No.  VI.  Conference,  1902.  Opening  remarks.  R.  R.  Moton. 
Report  of  Committee  on  vital  statistics  and  sanitary  problems. 
F.  J.  Shadd.  Report  of  the  Committee  on  general  statistics. 
J.  M.  Colson.  Report  of  Committee  on  domestic  science.  Mrs. 
R.  D.  Bowser.  An  effort  to  improve  negro  farmers  in  Texas. 
Robert  L.  Smith.  Report  of  Committee  on  business  and  labor 
conditions  in  Richmond,  Va.  W.  P.  Burrell.  Report  of  Com 
mittee  on  religion  and  ethics.  F.  J.  Grimke.  Co-operation 
essential  to  race  unity.  W.  S.  Scarborough.  Report  on  educa 
tion.  Kelly  Miller.  Condition  of  the  women  in  the  rural  dis 
tricts  of  Alabama.  What  is  being  done  to  remedy  that  condition. 
Georgia  Washington. 

No.  VII.  Conference,  1903.  Introduction.  Negro  rural  schools  in 
Virginia,  W.  T.  B.  Williams;  The  summer-school  idea,  W.  B. 
Evans;  The  school  in  its  relation  to  the  home;  The  philanthropic 
efforts  of  colored  women,  Miss  E.  B.  Kruse;  A  movement  for  the 
general  improvement  of  a  Georgia  community,  Judia  C.  Jackson; 
The  importance  of  business  to  the  negro,  W.  R.  Pettiford;  The 
problem  of  employment  for  negro  women,  Fannie  Barrier  Wil 
liams;  Labor  and  business  in  Virginia,  W.  P.  Burrell;  Some  facts 
from  the  Census  report  for  1900,  John  W.  Cromwell;  Some  defects 
of  the  church  and  recommendation  of  plans  for  improvement, 
J.  E.  Moorland;  Diseases  prevalent  in  negro  communities,  J.  W. 
Prather;  Report  of  Committee  on  resolutions. 

Hampton,  Va.     The    Hampton   normal   and   agricultural   institute, 

Hampton,  Va. 

Hampton,  Va.:    Hampton  institute  press,  1905.     15,  (1)  pp. 
Illustrations.     8°. 

Cover-title:  The  work  of  Hampton. 

Harris,  Norman  Dwight.     Tbe  history  of  negro  servitude  in  Illinois, 

and  of  the  slavery  agitation  in  that  state,  1719-1864. 
Chicago:  A.  C.  McClurg  &  co.,  1904.     *,  (#),  276  pp.     Por 
traits.     Facsimiles.     12°. 
Bibliography:  pp.  245-257. 

Herbert,  Hilary  A.  and  others.     Why  the  solid  South?   or,  recon 
struction  and  its  results. 

Baltimore:  R.  H.  Woodward  &  co.,1890.  xvii,  Jfi®  pp.  16°. 
CONTEXTS. — Reconstruction  at  Washington,  by  Hilary  A.  Herbert; 
In  Alabama,  by  Hilary  A.  Herbert;  In  North  Carolina,  by  Zebu- 
Ion  B.  Vance;  In  South  Carolina,  by  John  J.  Hemphill;  In 
Georgia,  by  H.  G.  Turner;  In  Florida,  by  Samuel  Pasco;  In  Ten 
nessee,  by  Ira  P.  Jones;  In  Virginia,  by  Robert  Stiles;  In  West 
Virginia,  by  O.  S.  Long  and  W.  L.  Wilson;  In  Missouri,  by  G.  G. 
Vest;  In  Arkansas,  by  W.  M.  Fishback;  In  Mississippi,  by  Ethel- 
bert  Barksdale;  In  Texas,  by  Chas.  Stewart;  In  Louisiana,  by 
B.  J.  Sage. 

Hill,  Walter  B.     Negro  education  in  the  south. 

(In  American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.     Annals,  vol. 

22,  Sept.,  1903,  pp.  320-329.     Philadelphia,  1903.     8°.) 
32964—06 4 


26  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Hill,  Walter  B.     Negro  education  in  the  South. 

( In  Conference  for  education  in  the  South.  6th,  Richmond,  Va.  and 
Charlottesville,  Va.,  1903,  Proceedings,  pp.  206-217.  New  York, 
1903.  8°.) 

Hobson,  Elizabeth  C.  and  Charlotte  E.  Hopkins.     A  report  concern 
ing  the  colored  women  of  the  South. 

Baltimore:  The  Trustees  [J.  Murphy  &  co.,  printers],  1896. 
15pp.  8°.  (Trustees  of  the  John  F.  Slater  fund.  Occa 
sional  papers,  no.  9} 

Holt,  George  C.     Lynching  and  mobs. 

(In  Journal  of  social  science,  vol.  32,  Nov.,  1894,  pp.  67-81.) 

John  F.  Slater  fund  for  the  education  of  f reedmen.     Proceedings  of 

the  trustees,  1883-1903-1904:. 
Baltimore,  New  York,  1883-190  J,.     14  rols.     8°. 

Johnson,  Edward  Augustus.     History  of  negro  soldiers  in  the  Span 
ish-American  war,  and  other  items  of  interest. 
Raleigh:    Capital  printing  co.,  1899.     lift  pp.    Plates.    Por 
traits.     8°. 

Light  ahead  for  the  negro. 

New  York:   The  Graf  ton  press,  [1904].    m,  (2],  132  pp.    12°. 

Johnson,  John  Quincy.     Report  of  the  fifth  Tuskegee  negro  confer 
ence,  1896. 

Baltimore:  The  Trustees  [J.  Murphy  A  co.,  printers},  1896. 
27  pp.  8°.  (Trustees  of  the  John  F.  8 Later  fund.  Occa 
sional  papers,  no.  8} 

Johnson,  William  Bishop.     The  scourging  of  a  race,  and  other  ser 
mons  and  addresses. 

Washington:  Beresford,  printer,  1904-  viii,  228  pp.  Por 
trait.  12°. 

Kelsey,  Carl.     The  evolution  of  negro  labor. 

(In  American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.  Current 
labor  problems^  pp.  55-76.  Philadelphia,  1903.  8°.) 

The  negro  farmer. 

Chicago:  Printed  and  on  sale  by  Jennings  &  Pye,  1903.  103 
pp.  Illustrations.  Maps.  8°. 

Kletzing,  Henry  F.  and  W.  H.  Crogman.     Progress  of  a  race;  or, 
The    remarkable    advancement  of    the   American   negro. 
With  an  introduction  by  Booker  T.  Washington. 
Atlanta,  Ga.,  Naperville,    III.,,  [etc.]:    J.   L.  Nichols  cfc  co. , 
1897.      663pp.     Illustrations.     Portrait.     12°. 

Leigh,  Frances  Butler.     Ten  years  on  a  Georgia  plantation  since  the 

war. 
London:  R.  Bentley  <&  son,  1883.     xi,  3 47  pp.     8°. 


SUPPLEMENTARY    LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    NEGEO    QUESTION        27 

Leroy-Beaulieu,  Pierre.    Die  Rassenf  rage  in  den  Vereinigten  Staaten. 
( In  Politisch-anthropologische  Revue, vol.  3,  Dec.,  1904,  pp.  537-541. ) 

The    United   States   in   the   twentieth    century;    authorized 

translation  by  H.  Addington  Bruce. 

New   York  and  London:  Funk  c6  Wagnalls  company,  1906. 
vcxvi,  396  pp.     12°. 

"The  negro  population  and  the  race  question,"  pp.  36-47. 

Liberia.     Bulletin  no.  1-11. 

Washington,   D.    C. :    Issued  by  the  American  colonization 
society,  1892-1897.     11  nos.     8°. 

Livenuore,  George.  An  historical  research  respecting  the  opinions 
of  the  founders  of  the  republic  on  negroes  as  slaves,  as 
citizens,  and  as  soldiers.  Read  before  the  Massachusetts 
historical  society,  August  14,  1862.  [With  supplementary 
note  and  index.] 

Boston:  Printed  ly  J.   Wilson  and  son,  1862.     xiv,  (2),  236 
pp.     5°. 

Also  pub.  in  Proceedings  of  the  Ma  achusetts  historical  society, 
1863,  v.  6,  pp.  86-248. 

Same.     4th  ed. 

Boston:  A.  Williams  and  company,  1863.     xviii,  (2),  ISlf.  pp. 

8°. 

Livingstone,  William  P.     Black  Jamaica;  a  study  in  evolution. 

London:    Sampson,  Low,  Marston,  and  company,  1899.     (2), 

298pp.     12°. 

Locke,  Mary  Stoughton.  Anti-slavery  in  America  from  the  intro 
duction  of  African  slaves  to  the  prohibition  of  the  slave 
trade  (1619-1808). 

Boston:    Ginn  &  co.,  1901.      xv,  255  pp.      8°.      (Radcliffe 
college  monographs,  no.  11) 

Lowell,  James  Russell.     The  anti-slavery  papers  of  James  Russell 

Lowell. 

Boston  and  New    York:    Houghton,    Mifflin   and  company, 
1902.     2  vols.     8~. 

These  volumes  "contain  more  than  fifty  articles;  the  first  five  con 
tributed  during  1844  to  the  '  Pennsylvania  freeman;'  the  rest, 
between  1845  and  1850,  to  the  '  National  anti-slavery  standard.'" — 
Introduction. 

jMcKinley,  Carlyle.]     An  appeal  to  Pharaoh.     The  negro  problem 

and  its  radical  solution. 
New  York:  Fords,  Howard  &  Hulbert,  1889.     205pp.     12C. 


28  LIBEAEY    OF    CONGRESS 

Manning,  Joseph  C.     Rise  and  reign  of  the  Bourbon  oligarchy. 

[Birmingham,  1904.]     27pp.     8°. 

Massachusetts.  Bureau  of  statistics  of  labor.  Social  and  industrial 
condition  of  the  negro  in  Massachusetts.  <From  the 
Thirt}7-fourth  annual  report  of  the  Massachusetts  Bureau 
of  statistics  of  labor,  p.  215-320.  > 

Boston:  Wright  &  Potter  printing  co.,  state  printers,  1904. 
(!},  215-319,  (l]pp.  8G. 

Mayo,  A.  D.  Southern  women  in  the  recent  educational  movement 
in  the  South. 

Washington:  Government  printing  office,  1892.  300pp.  8°. 
( U.  S.  Bureau  of  education.  Circular  of  information,  no. 
1,  1892.} 

The  work  of  certain  Northern  churches  in  the  education  of 
the  freedmen,  1861-1900. 

(In  U.  S.   Commissioner  of  education.     Report,   1901-02,  part  1, 
pp.  285-314.     Washington,  1903.     8°.) 

Merriam,  George  Spring.     The  negro  and  the  nation;  a  history  of 

American  slavery  and  enfranchisement. 
New  York:  H.  Holt  and  company,  1906.     iv,  1$6  pp.     8°. 

Moffat,  R.  Burnham.  The  disfranchisement  of  the  negro,  from  a 
lawyer's  point  of  view. 

(In  Journal  of  social  science,  no.  42,  Sept.,  1904,  pp.  31-62.     Bos 
ton,  1904.     8°.) 

Morris,  S.  L.     At  our  own  door;  a  study  of  home  missions  with 

special  reference  to  the  South  and  West. 
New  York,  Chicago,  Toronto,  [etc.}:  Fleming  H.  Resell  com 
pany,  [1904].     258pp.     12°. 

The  White  man's  burden,  pp.  112-129. 

Murphy,  Edgar  Gardner.     Problems  of  the  present  South;  a  discus 
sion  of  certain  of  the  educational,  industrial  and  political 
issues  in  the  southern  states. 
New  York,  London:   The  Macmillan  company,  190 4.     xi,  335 

pp.     12°. 

Negro  suffrage,  pp.  190-201. 

The  white  man  and  the  negro  at  the  South.     An  address 

delivered  under  invitation  of  the  American  academy  of 
political  and  social  science  ...  in  the  Church  of  the  Holy 
Trinity,  Philadelphia,  on  the  evening  of  March  8th,  A.  D. 
1900. 
[Montgomery?  Ala.,  1900.}     55pp.     8°. 


SUPPLEMENTAKY    LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    NEGRO    QUESTION        29 

Murphy,    Jeannette   Robinson.      Southern    thoughts    for    northern 

thinkers. 
New  York  city:   The  Bandanna  publishing  company,  [1904]* 

(2],  47  pp.    4°- 

CONTENTS.  —  Black  mammy,  creditor.  —  Sence  freedom  broke  out.  — 
Hands  off  the  negro.  —  Southern  thoughts  for  northern  thinkers.  — 
Religious  education  for  negroes.  —  1's  sorry  fo'  bits.  —  Lazy  Dink, 
a  runaway  slave.  —  Singin'  Sam.  —  Uncle  Jeter  churns  the  butter.  — 
De  future  ob  yo'  pas',  a  private  sermon.  —  How  the  palms  of 
negroes'  hands  became  white.  Gawd  bless  dem  Yankees,  a  bed 
time  story.  —  Group  of  sermons  heard  at  the  North.  —  African 
music  in  America.  —  Slave  spirituals,  Two  imitation  negro  songs 
(words  and  music) 

The  Negro  problem;  a  series  of  articles  by  representative  American 

negroes  of  today;  contributions  by  Booker  T.  Washing 

ton  .   .   .  W.  E.  Burghardt  Du  Bois,  Paul  Lawrence  Dun- 

bar,  Charles  W.  Chesnutt,  and  others. 

New  York:  J.  Pott  &  company,  1903.     234  pp.     Portraits. 


CONTENTS.  —  Washington,  B.  T.  Industrial  education  for  the 
negro.—  Du  Bois,  \V.  E.  B.  The  talented  tenth.—  Chesnutt, 
C.  W.  The  disfranchisement  of  the  negro.  —  Smith,  W.  H.  The 
negro  and  the  law.  —  Kealing,  H.  T.  The  characteristics  of  the 
negro  people.  —  Dunbar,  P.  L.  Representative  American  negroes.  — 
Fortune,  T.  T.  The  negro'  s  place  in  American  life  at  the  present  day. 

A  New  negro  for  a  new  century  ;  an  accurate  and  up-to-date  record  of 
the  upward  struggles  of  the  negro  race  .  .  .  Education, 
industrial  schools,  colleges  .  .  .  and  their  relationship  to 
the  race  problem  by  B.  T.  Washington.  Reconstruction 
and  industrial  advancement  by  N.  B.  Wood;  The  colored 
woman  and  her  part  in  race  regeneration,  by  Fannie  B. 
Williams. 

Chicago:  American  pub.   house,  [1900].     428  pp.   .  Illustra 
tions.     Plates.     Portrait.     8C. 

Newman,  Francis  William.     Anglo-Saxon  abolition  of  negro  slavery. 
London:  K  Paul,  Trench  &  co.,  1889.     (4),  136  pp.     8°. 

Parts  i  and   n   reprinted   from   Frazer's  magazine,  January  and 

February,  1879. 

CONTENTS.  —  pt.  i.  Negro  slavery  under  British  rule.  —  pt.  n.  Negro 
slavery  in  the  American  union.  —  pt.  in.  Final  issue  under  Presi 
dent  Lincoln.  —  pt.  iv.  The  good  cause  of  President  Lincoln. 

Page,  Thomas  Nelson.     The  negro:  the  southerner's  problem. 

New  York:  C.  Scribner's  sons,  1904.  «**',  (#),  316  pp.  12°. 
CONTENTS.  —  Slavery  and  the  old  relation  between  the  southern 
whites  and  blacks.  —  Some  of  its  difficulties  and  fallacies.  —  Its 
present  condition  and  aspect,  as  shown  by  statistics.  —  The  lynch 
ing  of  negroes:  its  cause  and  its  prevention.  —  The  partial  dis 
franchisement  of  the  negro.  —  The  old-time  negro.  —  The  race 
question.  —  Of  the  solution  of  the  question. 


30  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Peirce,  Paul  Skeels.     The  Freedmen's  bureau;  a  chapter  in  the  his 

tory  of  reconstruction. 

Iowa  City,  la.:   The  University,  1904.     (®})Vii,  WO  pp.     8°. 
(The  State  university  of  Iowa.     Studies  in  sociology,  eco 
nomics,  politics  and  history,  vol.  in.  no.  1) 
Bibliography:  pp.  [175]-186. 
"List  of  congressional  documents  used":  pp.  [187]-191. 

Pike,  Godfrey  Holden.     From  slave  to  college  president;  being  the 

life  story  of  Booker  T.  Washington. 

London:   T.  F.   Unwin,   1902.      (6],  111,  (1)  pp.  ,  Portrait. 
12°.     ([The  "lives  worth  living"  series]) 

The  Possibilities  of  the  negro  in  symposium   ...    a  solution  of  the 
negro  problem  psychologically  considered.     The  negro  not 
"a  beast." 
Atlanta,  Ga.  :   The  Franklin  printing  and  publishing  com 

pany,  [1904].     (4),  165  2>p.     1^- 

CONTENTS.  —  Dowman,  C.  E.  Foreword.  —  Graves,  J.  T.  Chicago  uni 
versity  speech:  "The  problem  of  the  races."  —  Grady,  H.  W. 
"Boston  banquet  speech."  —  Grady,  H.  W.  "But  what  of  the 
negro?"  —  Grady,  H.  W.  "What  of  the  negro?"  —  Timmons,  R. 
"Aged  ex-slaves  gather  at  home  of  old  master."  —  Northen,  W.  J. 
"Races  in  harmony;  South  safe  as  home."  —  Candler,  W.  A. 
"Must  put  down  the  mob  or  be  put  down  by  it."  —  Turner,  H.  M. 
"Races  must  separate."  —  Holsey,  L.  H.  "Race  segregation.  "- 
Edmonds,  R.  H.  "Burden  of  the  negro  problem."  —  Parks,  W.  B. 
"A  solution  of  the  negro  problem  psychologically  considered;  the 
negro  not  a  beast.  '  ' 

Reed,  John  C.     The  brothers'  war. 

Boston:  Little,  Brown,  and  company,  1905.     xviii,  4.66  pp. 


Richings,  G.  F.     Evidences  of  progress  among  colored  people.     12th 

ed. 

Philadelphia:    G.  S.  Ferguson  co.,  1905.     595pp.     Illustra 
tions  (incl.  portraits).     12°. 

Schell,  William  Gallic.  Is  the  negro  a  beast?  A  reply  to  Chas. 
Carroll's  book  entitled  "The  negro  a  beast."  Proving  that 
the  negro  is  human  from  Biblical,  scientific,  and  historical 
standpoints. 

Moundsville,   W.   Va.  :    Gospel  trumpet  pub.  co.  ,  1901.     238 
pp.     Illustrations.     Plates.     12°. 


SUPPLEMENTARY    LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    NEGRO    QUESTION        31 

Scholes,  Theophilus  E.  Samuel.  Glimpses  of  the  ages;  or  The 
''superior"  and  "inferior"  races,  so-called,  discussed  in 
the  light  of  science  and  history.  Vol.  I. 

London :  J.  Long,  1905.     8°. 

To  be  issued  in  2  volumes,  the  second  volume  to  follow  within  a 
year.  cf.  Preface. 

"This  review,  which  in  the  first  volume  deals  with  the  physical 
and  mental  aspects  of  the  subject,  and  which  in  the  second  vol 
ume  will  deal  with  the  moral  aspect,  has  shown,  and  will  show, 
the  utter  baselessness  of  the  conclusions,  that  the  white  race  is 
superior  to  the  coloured  races,  and  that  the  coloured  races  are 
inferior  to  the  white  race."  Preface,  p.  xvi. 

Shaler,  Nathaniel  Southgate.     The  citizen;  a  stud}7  of  the  individual 

and  the  government. 

New  York:  A.  S.  Barne*  and  company,  1904-     viii,  (#),  3^6 
pp.     18°. 

"The  negro  question,"  pp.  220-238. 

Simmons,  Enoch  S.     A  solution  of  the  race  problem  in  the  South. 

RaleigJi,    N.    C.:  Prcsse*  of  Edward*  <fc   Broughton,  1898. 
WO  pp.      Portrait.     12^. 

Simmons,  William  ,}.  Men  of  mark:  eminent,  progressive  and  rising. 
With  an  introductory  sketch  of  the  author  by  Henry  M. 
Turner. 

Cleveland,  O.:    G.  M.  Rewell  A  co.,  1887.     1138  pp.     Por 
traits.     8°. 

Same. 

Cleveland,  0.:  Baltimore;  The  Rewell  publishing  co.,  1891. 
736pp.     Portraits.     8°. 

Simpson,  Samuel.  A  treatise  on  negro  colonization.  Plan  for  colo 
nizing  all  the  negroes  in  the  United  States  on  foreign 
territory. 

Alexandria,    Va.,  1888.     20pp.     16-. 

Sinclair,  William  A.     The  aftermath  of  slavery;  a  study  of  the  con 
dition  and  environment  of  the  American  negro;  with  an 
introduction  by  Thomas  Wentworth  Higginson. 
Boston:   Small,  Maynard  <fc  company,  1905.     xiit,   358  pp. 
12°. 

CONTENTS. — A  biographical  note;  Introduction,  by  Thomas  Went 
worth  Higginson;  1.  The  institution  of  slavery  and  its  abolition; 
2.  Reconstruction  and  the  Southern  "Black  code";  3.  Southern 
opposition  to  reconstruction;  4.  The  war  on  negro  suffrage; 
5.  The  false  alarm  of  negro  domination;  (5.  The  negro  in  politics; 
7.  The  negro  and  the  law;  8.  The  rise  and  achievements  of  the 
colored  race;  9.  The  national  duty  to  the  negro;  10.  Public 
opinion  omnipotent. 


32  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Smith,  Hoke.     George  Peabody  and  the  work  of  the  Peabody  fund. 
An   address   delivered   before    the   Southern    educational 
association  held  at  Atlanta,  Georgia,  December  30th  and 
31st  1903,  and  January  1st  1904. 
Hackney  &  Moale  co.,  Asheville,  3T.  C.  [1904].     12pp.     8°. 

Smith,  William  Benjamin.  The  color  line;  a  brief  in  behalf  of  the 
unborn. 

New  York:  McClure,  Phillips  &  co.,  190 5.     xv,  261pp.    12°. 
CONTEXTS. — The  individual?  or  the  race? — Is  the  negro  inferior? — 

Nurture?  or  nature? — Plea  and   counterplea. — A  dip  into    the 

future. — The  argument  from  numbers. 
Foresees  the  disappearance  of  the  negro. 

Smith,  William  Henry.  A  political  histoiy  of  slavery;  being  an  ac 
count  of  the  slavery  controversy  from  the  earliest  agitation 
in  the  eighteenth  century  to  the  close  of  the  reconstruction 
period  in  America.  With  an  introduction  by  Whitelaw  Reid. 
G.  P.  Putnarrfs  sons,  New  York  and  London,  1903.  2  vols. 
frontispiece.  8°. 

The  Southern  workman  and  Hampton  school  record.     Vol.  28-35. 

Hampton,   Va.,  Hampton  normal  and  agricultural  institute, 
1899-1906.     8°. 

Stevens,  William.  The  slave  in  history;  his  sorrows  and  his  eman 
cipation.  With  portraits,  and  with  illustrations  by  J.  Fin- 
nemore. 

London :   The  Religious  tract  society,  1904-     379  pp.     Plates. 
Portraits.     12°. 

First  questions  in  America,  pp.  255-264;  The  fugitive  slave,  pp.  265- 
272;  Harriet  Beecher  Stowe,  pp.  273-284;  William  Lloyd  Gar 
rison,  pp.  285-293;  John  Brown,  pp.  294-311;  Abraham  Lincoln, 
pp.  312-323;  The  negro  as  citizen,  pp.  324-330. 

Tarver,  H.  M.  The  negro  in  the  histoiy  of  the  United  States  from 
the  beginning  of  English  settlements  in  America,  1607,  to 
the  present  time,  with  the  Constitution  of  the  United 
States  and  illustrations. 

Austin,  Tex. :   The  State  printing  company,  1905.     (4],  [31]- 
186,  (2)  pp.     Illustrations.     Portraits.     12°. 

Terrell,  Robert  H.     A  glance  at  the  past  and  present  of  the  negro;  an 
address  delivered  at  Church's  auditorium,  before  the  Citi 
zen's  industrial  league  of  Memphis,  Tennessee,  September 
22,  1903. 
Washington:  Press  of  E.  L.  Pendleton,  1903.     16pp.     8°. 

Tricoche,  George  Nestler.     La  question  des  noirs  aux  Etats-Unis. 
Paris:    Guillawnin  et  cie.  1894-     44pP>      8°. 

"  Extrait  du  Journal  des  economistes  (num6ros  d'aout  et  de  septem- 
bre!894)" 


SUPPLEMENTARY    LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    NEGEO    QUESTION        33 

United  States.  Bureau  of  the  census.  Bulletin  8.  Negroes  in  the 
United  States. 

Washington:    Government  printing  office,  1901f,.     333pp.     If. 
The   negro  population,  Walter  F.   Willcox,  pp.  11-68;  The  negro 
farmer,  W.  E.  Burghardt  Du  Bois,  pp.  69-98;  General  tables,  pp. 
101-333. 

Vance,  Joseph  Anderson.     American  problems. 

Chicago:    The  Winona  publishing  company,   190 1^.     252  pp. 
18°. 

"The  negro."     pp.  19-52. 

[Virey,  Julien  Joseph]     Natural  history  of  the  negro  race.     Extracted 

from  the  French. 

Charleston,  S.  C.:  D.  J.  Dowling,  1837.      mi,  v,  ii,  162  pp. 
16°. 

Dedication  in  English  and  French. 

Chiefly  extracted  from  Virey's  Histoire  naturelle  du  genre  humain. 

' '  On  the  comparative  anatomy  of  the  negro  and  European.     Selected 

from  Professor  Soemmering's  essay":  pp.  57-75. 
"Appendix.     Of  diseases  which  affect  the  human  race  specially  in 
each  climate":  pp.  [129J-162. 

Walker,  H.  de  R.     The  West  Indies  and  the  Empire:    study  and 

travel  in  the  winter  of  1900-1901. 

London:  T.  Fisher  Unwin,  1901.    x,  253 pp.    Foldedmap.  8°. 
"  The  negro  and  the  East  Indian,"  pp.  109-175. 

Warner,  Charles  Dudley.     The  education  of  the  negro. 

(In  American  social  science  association.     Journal  of  social  science, 
no.  38,  Dec.,  1900,  pp.  1-14.) 

Washington,  Booker  Taliaferro.  Black-belt  diamonds;  gems  from 
the  speeches,  addresses,  and  talks  to  students  of  Booker  T. 
Washington;  selected  ...  by  Victoria  E.  Matthews; 
introduction  by  T.  T.  Fortune. 

New  York:  Fortune  &  Scott,  1898.     xii,  115  pp.     Portrait. 
16°. 

Character  building;    being  addresses  delivered  on   Sunday 

evenings  to  the  students  of  Tuskegee  institute. 
New  York:  Doubleday,  Page  <&  company,  1902.     (12],  291  pp. 
Frontispiece.     12Q. 

Negro  education  not  a  failure.     Address  in  the  Concert  Hall 

of  Madison  Square  garden,  New  York,  Lincoln's  birthday, 
February  12,  1904. 

\Tuske<jee\:    Tuskegee  institute  steam  print,  \190Jf\.     13  pp. 
12°. 

Cover-title. 


34  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Washington,  Booker  Taliaf erro.     The  story  of  ray  life  and  work,  with 
an  introduction  by  J.  L.  M.  Curry,  illustrated  by  F.  Beard. 
Naperville,    Chicago    [etc.}:    J.    L.    Nichols   <£   co.,    [1900]. 
4%3  pp.     Illustrations.     Plates.     8°. 

Same.     25th  thousand.     Rev.  ed. 
Naperville,  III.,  Atlanta,    Ga.   [etc.]:  J.  L.  Nichols 
[1901].     ^23  pp.     Illustrations.     Plates.     Portrait. 

ed.     Tuskegee  &  its  people:   their  ideals  and  achievements. 
New   York:    J).  Appleton  &  company,  1905.     xiv,  35  J^  pp. 
Plates.     Portraits.     8°. 

The  volume  here  presented  has  been  edited  by  Mr.  Emmett  J.  Scott, 
executive  secretary  of  the  Tuskegee  institute.  The  task  of  editing 
which  the  principal  had  expected  to  perform  has  been  so  well 
done  that  it  has  only  been  necessary  to  review  the  manuscript 
after  its  preparation  for  the  publishers,  and  to  forego  the  strict 
editorial  revisioning  planned,  cf.  General  introduction. 
CONTEXTS. — I.  The  school  and  its  purposes. — II.  Autobiographies 
by  graduates  of  the  school. 

Working  with  the  hands;  being  a  sequel  to  "Up  from  slavery," 
covering  the  author's  experience  in  industrial  training  at 
Tuskegee;  illustrated  from  photographs  by  Frances  Ben 
jamin  Johnston. 

New  York:  Doubleday,  Page  t&  company,  1904,.  %,  ®4-6  PP- 
Plates.  Portrait.  12°. 

Washington  conference  on  the  race  problem  in  the  United  States, 
Washington,  D.  C.,  1903.  How  to  solve  the  race  problem. 
The  proceedings  of  the  Washington  conference  on  the  race 
problem  in  the  United  kStates  under  the  auspices  of  the 
National  sociological  society,  held  at  the  Lincoln  temple 
Congregational  church;  at  the  Nineteenth  street  Baptist 
church  and  at  the  Metropolitan  A.  M.  E.  church,  Washing 
ton,  D.  C.,  November  9,  10,  11,  and  12,  1903.  Addresses, 
resolutions,  and  debates  by  eminent  men  of  both  races  and 
in  every  walk  of  life. 

Washington,  D.  C.:  Beresford,  printer,  1904.     (2),  286  pp. 
Illustrations.     Portraits.    8°. 
Edited  by  Jesse  Lawson. 
Contains  the  following  addresses: 

Race  segregation,  by  Bishop  Lucius  H.  Holsey;  The  duty  of  the 
white  American  towards  his  colored  fellow-citizen,  by  Rev.  A.  D. 
Mayo;  Race  segregation  and  distribution,  George  H.  White,  John 
P.  Green,  Reuben  S.  Smith,  Geo.  F.  Bragg,  and  others;  Race 
harmony,  the  city  negro,  rape  and  lynchings,  Booker  T.  Wash 
ington,  L.  M.  Hershaw,  Walter  H.  Brooks,  and  others;  Psychology 
of  race  prejudice,  Dean  Richmond  Babbitt;  The  negro's  place  in 
history,  E.  A.  Johnson;  Religion,  Walter  H.  Brooks,  with  die- 


SUPPLEMENTARY    LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    NEGRO    QUESTION         35 

cussion;  The  duty  of  the  white  man  of  the  North  and  the  black 
man  of  the  South,  Algernon  S.  Crapsey;  I^ace  mortality,  J.  R. 
Wilder;  The  necessity  for  the  appointment  of  a  commission  to 
consider  every  phase  of  the  American  race  problem,  Daniel  Mur 
ray;  Negro  education  not  a  failure,  Booker  T.  Washington. 

Weeks,  Stephen  Beauregard.     Southern  Quakers  and  slavery:  a  study 

in  institutional  history. 

Baltimore:    The  Johns  Hopkins  press^   1896.     xiv,  JfiO  pp. 
Folded  m.ap.     8°.     (Johns  Hopkins  university  studies  in 
historical  and  political  science  .  .   .     Extra  vol.  xi>.) 
Bibliography:  pp.  345-362. 

Williams,  George  Washington.  A  history  of  the  negro  troops  in  the 
war  of  the  rebellion,  1861-1865,  preceded  by  a  review  of 
the  military  services  of  negroes  in  ancient  and  modern 
times. 

JVew   York:  Harper  &  brother  s,  1888.     xvi,  353  pp.     Illus 
trations.     Plates.     12°. 

History  of  the  negro  race  in  America,  1619-1880. 
Neto  York:    G.  P.  Putnam's  sons,  1883.     2  vols.     8°. 

Wilson,  Henry.     History  of  the  rise  and  fall  of  the  slave  power  in 

America. 
Boston:  J.  R.  Osgood  &  co. ,  1872-187 ^.     2  vols.     8°. 

Wilson,  Joseph  T.  The  black  phalanx;  a  history  of  the  negro  sol 
diers  of  the  United  States  in  the  wars  of  1775-1812, 
1861-'65. 

Hartford:    American  publishing   company,   1888.     328  pp. 
Illustrations.     Plates.     Portraits.     8°. 
Bibliography:  p.  517. 

CONTENTS. — pt.  i.    The  wars  for  independence.     1775-1812. — pt.  u. 
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Wimberly,  A.  T.     A  study  in  black  and  white.     An  opinion  of  the 
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[New  Orleans,  La. :  1904.]    %5  pp-     8°. 
Cover-title. 


NEGRO  QUESTION:    ARTICLES  IN   PERIODICALS 

1879.     Reconstruction  and  the  negro.     D.  H.  Chamberlain. 

North  American  review,  vol.  128  (Feb.  1879}:  161-173. 

1879.  Ought  the  negro  to  be  disfranchised?  Ought  he  to  have  been 
enfranchised?  James  G.  Elaine,  L.  Q.  C.  Lamar,  Wade 
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1884,  The  future  of  the  negro  in  the  South.     James  B.  Craighead. 

Popular  science  monthly,  vol.  26  (Nov.  1884}  •'  39. 

1885.  The  freedman's  case  in  equity.     George  W.  Cable. 

Century  magazine,  vol.  29  (Jan.  1885} :  409-4.18. 

1885.     In  plain  black  and  white.     A  reply  to  Mr.  Cable.     Henry  W. 

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1889.  The  republican  party  and  the  negro.     E.  L.  Godkin. 

Forum,  vol.  7  (May,  1889}:  24-6-257. 

1890.  Statistics  of  the  colored  race  in  the  United  States.     Francis  A. 

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1891.  White  and  negro  criminals. 

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1891.     Negro  labor.     The  experience  of  Southern  manufacturers. 

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1891.     Negro  labor  in  the  South.     Comments  of  leading  journals. 
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1891.  Thoughts  on  the  negro  problem.     James  Bryce. 

North  American  review,  vol.  153  (Dec.,  1891}:  641. 

1892.  A  cross  section  through  North  Carolina.     A.  B.  Hart. 

Nation,  vol.  54  (Mar.  17,  1892}:  207. 

1892.     A  Southerner  on  the  negro  question.     Thomas  Nelson  Page. 
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37 


38  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

1893.     Negro    suffrage   a    failure:    shall    we    abolish  it?     John    C. 
Wickliffe. 

Forum,  vol.  14  (Feb.,  1893}:  797-801, . 

1893.  Why  the  Southern  elections  fraud  issue  was  a  failure.     L. 

Satterthwait. 
American  journal  of  politics,  vol.  2  (Apr.,  1893}:  41®  • 

1894.  The  South  and  its  problems.     L.  B.  Evans. 

Educational  review,  vol.  7  (Apr.,  1894):  333-342. 

1896.     South  Carolina's  new  constitution.     Albert  Shaw. 

American  monthly  review  of  reviews,  vol.   13  (Jan.,  1896}: 
66-71. 

1896.     The  education  of  the  negro.     J.  L.  M.  Curry. 

American  magazine  of  civics,  vol.  8  (Fel>.,  1896}:  169-180. 

1898.     The  study  of  the  negro  problems.     W.  E.  Burghardt  DuBois. 
American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.     Annals, 
vol.  11,  (Jan.,  1898}:  1-23. 

1898.     Taking  away  the  negro's  ballot.     Francis  Bellamy. 

Illustrated  American,  vol.  23  (Jan.  15,  1898}:  72. 

1898.     An  appeal  to  the  Louisiana  convention. 

Independent,  vol.  50  (Feb.  17,  1898}:  217-218. 

1898.     The  Louisiana  suffrage  clause.     Would  it  be  constitutional? 
Public  opinion,  vol.  24  (March 24, 1898}:  362;  (June  2,  1898}: 
679. 

1898.     The  Louisiana  constitution. 

Independent,  vol.  50  (March  31,  1898}:  412-413. 

1898.     The  new  constitution  (Louisiana). 

Nation,  vol.  66  (May  19,  1898}:  374. 

1898.     Disfranchising  a  race. 

Nation,  vol.  66  (May  26,  1898}:  398-399. 

1898.     The  future  of  the  American  negro.     Booker  T.  Washington. 

Missionary  review,  vol.  21  (June,  1898):  J$7~433. 

1898.     Education  and  suffrage  of  negroes.     Booker  T.  Washington. 

Education,  vol.  19  (Sept.  1898}:  49-50. 

1898.     The  race  problem  in  the  South.    L  The  North  Carolina  revo 
lution  justified.     A.  J.  McKelway.     II.  A  negro's   view. 
Kelly  Miller. 
Outlook,  vol.  60  (Dec.  31,  1898):  1057-1059;  1059-1063. 


NEGRO  QUESTION:  ARTICLES  IN  PERIODICALS  39 

1899.     A  negro  schoolmaster  in  the  new  South.     W.  E.  Burghardt 
DuBois. 

Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  83  (Jan.,  1899}:  9.9-104. 

1899.     Race  war  in  North  Carolina.     H.  L.  West. 

Forum,  vol.  26  (Jan.  1899):  578-579. 

1899.     Light  in  the  South.     Booker  T.  Washington. 
Independent,  vol.  51  (Jan.  19,  1899}:  175-176. 

1899.     Efforts  of  negroes  for  their  own  social  betterment. 

Outlook,  vol.  61  (Jan.  28,  1899}:  235. 

1899.     [Discrimination  between  whites  and  negroes  in  the  South.] 
Independent,  vol.  51  (Mar.  9,  1899}:  713. 

1899.     The  three  phases  of  colored  suffrage.     Walter  C.  Hamin. 

North  American  review,  vol.  168  (Mar.  1899}:  285-296. 

1899.     Negro  disf  ranchisement. 

Outlook,  vol.  61  (Mar.  4,  1899}:  486. 

1899.  The  race  problem.  A  symposium.  1.  The  origin  of  race  an 
tagonism,  by  James  T.  Holly.  2.  Is  there  a  negro  problem  ? 
by  W.  H.  Councill.  3.  Disf  ranchisement  as  a  remedy,  by  J. 
Montgomery  McGovern.  4.  Impossibility  of  racial  amal 
gamation,  by  W.  S.  McCurley.  5.  Educational  possibili 
ties,  by  Booker  T.  Washington. 
Arena,  vol.  21  (Apr.  1899}:  421-458. 

1899.     Negro  disf  ranchisement  in  North  Carolina. 
Outlook,  vol.  61  (Apr.  1,  1899}:  711-712. 

1899.     Negro  disfranchisement  in  Alabama. 

Outlook,  vol.  61  (Apr.  8,  1899}:  802-803. 

1899.     A  Southern  woman's  view  [of  the  negro  question.]    Mrs.  L.  H. 

Harris. 
Independent,  vol.  51  (May  18,  1899}:  1354-1355. 

1899.     The  negro  and  crime.     W.  E.  Burghardt  DuBois. 
Independent,  vol.  51  (May  18,  1899}:  1355-1357. 

1899.     America's  working  people.      4.  The  negro  as  an  industrial 

factor.     5.  The  negro  as  a  citizen.     Charles  B.  Spahr. 
Outlook,  vol.  62  (May  6, 1899}:  31-37;  (July  1, 1899}:  490-499. 

1899.     Negro  suffrage  in  Alabama.     Joseph  F.  Johnston. 

Independent,  vol.  51  (June  8,  1899):  1535-1537. 

1899.     Negro  womanhood.     Mrs.  L.  H.  Harris. 

Independent,  vol.  51  (June  22,  1899):  1687-1689. 


40  LIBKAKY    OF    CONGEESS 

1899.     "Good  Indians"  and  "good  'niggers."1    T.  Thomas  Fortune. 
Independent,  vol.  51  (June  82,  1899):  1689. 

1899.     Negro  immorality. 

Independent,  vol.  51  (June  22,  1899):  1703-1704. 

1899.     History  of  the  negro  question.     3.  L.  M.  Curry. 

Popular  science  monthly,  vol.  55' (June  1899):  177-185. 

1899.     The  future  of  the  negro.     W.  H.  Council!. 

Forum,  vol.  27  (July  1899):  570-577. 

1899.     Race  problem  in  the  United  States.     Booker  T.  Washington. 

Popular  science  monthly,  vol.  55  (July  1899) :  317-325. 

1899.     The  negro  as  a  modern  soldier.     James  Cleland  Hamilton. 
Anglo- American  magazine,  vol.  2  (Aug.  1899):  113-124' 

1899.     The  racial  troubles  in  the  South.     B.  Odell  Duncan. 
Harper's  weekly,  vol.  43  (Aug.  19,  1899):  817. 

1899.     A  pioneer  in  negro  education.     Bernard  C.  Steiner. 
Independent,  vol.  51  (Aug.  94,  1899):  2287-2290. 

1899.     The  negro  as  a  soldier. 

Public  opinion,  vol.  27  (Aug.  17,  1899):  198. 

1899.     The  American  negro  and  his  place.     Elizabeth  L.  Banks. 

Nineteenth  century,  vol.  46  (Sept.  1899):  459-474-. 

1899.     The  case  of  the  negro.     Booker  T.  Washington. 
Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  84  (Nov.  1899):  577-587. 

1899.     The  suffrage  fight  in  Georgia.     W.  H.  Burghardt  Du  Bois. 
Independent,  vol.  51  (Nov.  30,  1899):  3226-3228. 

1899.     Disfranchising  the  negro. 

Nation,  vol.  69  (Nov.  23,  1899):  384. 

1899.     A  negro  on  the  position  of  the  negro  in  America.    D.  E.  Tobias. 
Nineteenth  century,  vol.  46  (Dec.  1899):  957-973. 

1899.  Disfranchisement  defeated  in  Georgia. 

Independent^  vol.  51  (Dec.  7,  1899):  3306-3307. 

1900.  The  Philadelphia  negro:  a  social  study.     Percy  N.  Booth. 

American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.     Annals, 
vol.  15  (Jan.  1900):  100-103. 

1900.     Race  war  and  negro  demoralization.     Thomas  F.  Price. 

American    Catholic   quarterly   review,  vol.   25   (Jan.    1900): 
89-105. 


NEGRO  QUESTION;  ARTICLES  IN  PERIODICALS 


41 


1900.     Negro  education.     Charles  Minor  Blackford,  jr. 

Arena,  vol.  23  (Jan.  1900):  24-30. 

1900.     Signs  of  progress  among  the  negroes.     Booker  T.  Washing 
ton. 

Century  magazine,  vol.  59  (Jan.  1900):  472-478. 

1900.     The   negro   as   a   factor   in   the  future  of  the  West  Indies. 
H.  C.  De  Lisser. 

New  century  review,  vol.  7  (Jan.  1900) :  1-6. 

1900.     Booker  T.  Washington  on  our  racial  problem. 
Outlook,  vol.  64  (Jan.  6,  1900):  14-17. 

1900.     The  Philadelphia  negro.     Henry  L.  Philipps. 

Charities  review,  vol.  9  (Feb.  1900):  575-678. 

1900.     The  American  negro  of  to-day.     Philip  Alexander  Bruce. 

Contemporary  review,  vol.  77  (Feb.  1900):  284-297. 

1900.     Secret  societies  and  negro  progress.     W.  P.  Trent. 

Public  opinion,  vol.  28  (Feb.  22, 1900):  238. 

1900.     The  race  problem:  a  southern  conference. 

American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.     Annals, 
vol.  15  (March,  1900):  307-310. 

1900.     The  negro  as  a  political  factor  in  the  South.     A.  ...  Abbott. 

Anglo-American  magazine,  vol.  3  (March,  1900) :  203-207. 

1900.     Thirty-five  years  of  freedom  for  the  negro. 
Outlook,  vol.  64  (Mar.  10,  1900):  565. 

1900.     Village  improvement  among  the  negroes.     R.  L.  Smith. 
Outlook,  vol.  64  (Mar.  31,  1900):  733-736. 

1900.     The  negro  in  business. 

Public  opinion,  vol.  28  (Mar.  1900):  399. 

1900.     The  American  negro  in  business. 

Spectator,  vol.  84  (Mar.  31,  1900):  440. 

1900.     "Learning  by  doing"  at  Hampton.     Albert  Shaw. 

American  review  of  revietvs,  vol.  21  (Aj/r.  1900):  417-432. 

1900.     The  negro's  case  in  equity.     Ida  B.  Wells  Barnett. 

Independent,  vol.  52  (Apr.  26,  1900):  1010. 

i 
1900.     Lynching  and  the  franchise  rights  of  the  negro. 

American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.     Annals, 
vol.  15  (May,  1900):  493-497. 


42  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

1900.     The  negro  and  the  soil.     D.  Allen  Willey. 
Arena,  vol.  23  (May,  1900}:  553-560. 

1900.     The  Montgomery  conference.     Isabel  C.  Barrows. 

Independent,  vol.  52  (May  24,  1900):  1257-1259. 

1900.     The  Montgomery  conference. 

Outlook,  vol.  65  (May  19,  1900):  153-155. 

1900.     The  Montgomery  conference.     Isabel  C.  Barrows. 
Outlook,  vol.  65  (May  19,  1900):  160-162. 

1900.     The  negro  since  the  civil  war.     N.  S.  Shaler. 

Popular  science  monthly,  vol.  57  (May,  1900):  29-39. 

1900.     The  Montgomery  conference. 

American  monthly  review  of  reviews,  vol.  21  (June,  1900) :  655. 

1900.     Will  education  solve  the  race  problem?     John  Roach  Straton. 
North  American  review,  vol.  170  (June,  1900) :  785-801. 

1900.     The  future  of  the  negro  in  the  Southern  states.     N.  S.  Shaler. 
Popular  science  monthly,  vol.  57  (June,  1900):  147-156. 

1900.     The  industrial  color-line  in  the  North.     James  S.  Stemons. 
Century  magazine,  vol.  60  (July,  1900):  477-478. 

1900.     The  Montgomery  conference. 

Charities  review,  vol.  10  (July,  1900):  193-194- 

1900.     Montgomery  conference. 

Chautauquan,  vol.  31  (July,  1900):  328. 

1900.     The  Montgomery  race  conference.     Booker  T.  Washington. 
Century  magazine,  vol.  60  (Aug.  1900):  630-632. 

1900.     Tuskegee  negro  conference.     Max  Bennett  Thrasher. 
Chautauquan,  vol.  31  (Aug.  1900):  504-507. 

1900.     The  negro  problem  in  the  South.     Charles  Henry  Grosvenor. 

Forum,  vol.  29  (Aug.  1900):  720-725. 

1900.     North  Carolina's  red-shirt  campaign. 

Independent,  vol.  52  (Aug.  2,  1900):  1874-1876. 

1900.     Election  in  North  Carolina.     Marion  Butler. 

Independent,  vol.  52  (Aug.  16,  1900):  1953-1955. 

1900.     The  North  Carolina  suffrage  amendment.     A.  J.  McKelway. 

Independent,  vol.  52  (Aug.  16,  1900):  1955-1957. 

1900.     Education  will  solve  the  race  problem.     A  reply.     Booker  T. 

Washington. 
North  American  review,  vol.  171  (Aug.  1900) : 


NEGRO  QUESTION:  AETICLES  IN  PERIODICALS 


43 


1900.     Crime  among  the  negroes  of  Chicago.     A  social  study.     Mon 
roe  N.  ^V  ork. 
American  journal  of  sociology,  vol.  6  (Sept.  1900}:  204-223. 

1900.     The  fourteenth  amendment  and  the  race  question.     Max  West. 

American  journal  of  sociology,  vol.  6  (Sept.  1900):  248-254- 

1900.     North  Carolina's  suffrage  amendment. 

American  monthly  review   of  reviews,  vol.  22  (Sept.  1900): 
273-271,. 

1900.     Crime  among  the  negroes  of  Chicago. 

Public  opinion,  vol.  29  (Sept.  20,  1900}:  367. 

1900.     The  negro  problem  in  the  South.     Oscar  W.  Underwood. 

Forum,  vol.  30  (Oct.  1900}:  215-219. 

1900.  Have  we  an  American  race  question?  1.  The  negro  vindi 
cated.  George  Allen  Mebane.  2.  Passing  of  the  race 
problem.  Walter  L.  Hawley.  3.  Lawlessness  vs.  law 
lessness.  W.  S.  Scarborough.  4.  A  plea  from  the  South. 
Walter  Guild. 
Arena,  vol.  24  (Nov.,  1900}:  J49-488. 

1900.     Paths  of  hope  for  the  negro.     Jerome  Dowd. 

Century  magazine,  vol.  61  (Dec.  1900}:  278-281. 

1900.     The  negro  in  New  York.     Jno.  Gilmer  Speed. 

Harper's  weekly,  vol.  44  (Dec.  22,  1900):  1249-1250. 

1900.     The  American  negro  and   his   economic  value.     Booker  T. 

Washington. 
International  monthly,  vol.  2  (Dec.  1900} :  672-686. 

1900.     The   religion   of    the   American   negro.      W.    E.    Burghardt 
DuBois. 

New  world,  vol.  9  (Dec.  1900):  614-625. 


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44  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

1901.     Has  Jamaica  solved  the  color  problem?     Julius  Moritzen. 

en-union's  magazine,  vol.  20  (Jan.,  1901):  31-46. 

1901.     New  Orleans  and  negro  education. 

Grunton's  magazine,  vol.  20  (Jan. ,  1901} :  66-70. 

1901.     The  conditions  of   the  reconstruction  problem.     Hilary  A. 
Herbert. 

Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  87  (Feb.,  1901):  145-157. 

1901.     The  training  of  the  negro  teacher.     Nathan  B.  Young. 
Education,  vol  21  (Feb.,  1901):  359-364. 

1901.     The  negro  and  education.     Kelly  Miller. 

Forum,  vol.  30  (Feb.,  1901):  693-700. 

1901.     A   Southern   woman's   appeal    for   justice.     Amanda    Smith 
Jemand. 

Independent,  vol.  53  (Feb.  21,  1901):  438-440. 

1901.     The  negro  problem.     Charles  H.  Vail. 

International  socialist  review -,  vol.  1  (Feb.,  1901):  464~470' 

1901.     The  South  and  the  negro.     Marion  L.  Dawson. 

North  American  review,  vol.  172  (Feb.,  1901):  279-284. 

1901.     Disfranchisement  in  Maryland. 

Public  opinion,  vol.  30  (Feb.,  21,  1901):  230-231. 

1901.     The  race  problem.     As  discussed  by  negro  women.     Mary 
Taylor  Blauvelt. 

American  journal  of  sociology,  vol.  6  (Mar.,  1901):  662-672. 

1901.     Negro  education  in  the  South.     Paul  B.  Barringer. 

Educational  review,  vol.  21  (Mar.,  1901):  233-243. 

1901.     The  negro  in  business.     Booker  T.  Washington. 

Guntorfs  magazine,  vol.  20  (Mar.,  1901):  209-219. 

1901.     The  remedy  for  disfranchisement. 

Public  opinion,  vol.  30  (Mar.  28,  1901):  390-391. 

1901.     Reconstruction  in  South  Carolina.     Daniel  H.  Chamberlain. 

Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  87  (Apr.  1901):  473-484. 

1901.     The  case  for  the  South.     J.  W.  Bailey. 

Forum,  vol.  31  (Apr.  1901):  225-230. 

1901.     The  Tuskegee  negj-o  conference  as  an  educational  force.    Max 

Bennett  Thrasher. 
Guntorfs  magazine,  vol.  20  (Apr.  1901):  359-366. 


NEGRO  QUESTION:  ARTICLES  IN  PERIODICALS  45 

1901.     The  Southern  mountaineer.     John  Fox,  jr. 

Scribner's  magazine,  vol.  29  (Apr.    1901}:   387-399;  (May, 
1901):  556-570. 

1901.     The  negro  and  our  new  possessions.     W.  S.  Scarborough. 
Forum,  vol.  31  (May,  1901}:  340-349. 

1901.     Popular  education  and  the  race  problem  in  North  Carolina. 

Joseph  W.  Bailey. 
Outlook,  vol.  68  (May  11,  1901}:  114-116. 

1901.     The  Alabama  constitutional  convention.     Max  B.  Thrasher. 

Outlook,  vol.  68  (June  22,  1901}:  437-439. 

1901.     Shame  of  New  Orleans. 

Independent,  vol.  53  (July  11,  1901}:  1630. 

1901.     The  burden  of  negro  schooling.     W.  E.  Burghardt  Du  Bois. 

Independent,  vol.  53  (July  18, 1901}:  1667-1668. 

1901.     The  condition  of  the  South.     Walter  G.  Oakman. 

North  American  review,  vol.  173  (July,  1901} :  40-43. 

1901.     The  negro  as  soldier  and  officer. 

Nation,  vol.  73  (Aug.  1,1901}:  85-86. 

1901.     Southern  suffrage  amendments.     Joseph  Culbertson  Clayton. 

Albany  law  journal,  vol.  63  (Sept.,  1901}:  358-359. 

1901.     The  southern  people  during  reconstruction.     T.  N.  Page. 

Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  88  (Sept.,  1901}:  289-304. 

1901.     Southern  problem.     G.  A.  Thacher. 

Forum,  vol.  3%  (Sept.  1901}:  116-118. 

1901.     Reconstruction  and  disfranchisement. 

Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  88  (Oct.  1901}:  433-437. 

1901.     The  undoing  of  reconstruction.     William  A.  Dunning. 

Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  88  (Oct.  1901}:  437-449. 

1901.     Alabama's  new  constitution. 

Outlook,  vol.  69  (Nov.  23,  1901}:  751. 

1901.     The  race  problem  at  the  South.     H.  A.  Herbert. 

Social  science,  vol.  4  (Nov.  1901} :  139-140. 

1901.  Suffrage,  North  and  South.     William  R.  Merriam 

Forum,  vol.  32  (Dec.  1901}:  460-465. 

1902.  Alabama  constitutional  convention.     G.  Corey. 

American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.     Annals, 
vol.  19  (Jan.  1902}:  143-145. 


46  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

1902.     The  American  negro  as  a  religious,  social,  and  political  factor, 

Kelly  Miller. 
Anglo-American  magazine,  vol.  7  (Jan.  1902) :  63-75. 

1902.     Alabama's  new  constitution. 

Chautauquan,  vol.  34  (Jan.  1902):  361. 

1902.     Economic  work  of  the  negro.     B.  T.  Washington. 

Current  literature,  vol.  32  (Jan.  1902):  85-86. 

1902.     Our  negro  population. 

Independent,  vol.  54  (Jan.  2,  1902):  57. 

1902.     Impossibility  of  restoring  negro  suffrage. 

World's  work,  vol.  3  (Jan.  1902):  1585-1586. 

1902.     The  expansion  of  the  negro  population.     Kelly  Miller. 
Forum,  vol.  32  (Feb.  1902):  671-679. 

1902.     The  "Black  north."     Rebecca  Harding  Davis. 

Independent,  vol.  54  (Feb.  6,  1902):  338-34.0. 

1902.     The  negro  problem.     Henry  W.  Blair. 

Independent,  vol  54  (Feb.  20,  1902):  44^-444- 

1902.     Theology  versus  thrift  in  the  black  belt.     Charles  B.  Dyke. 
Popular  science  monthly,  vol.  60  (Feb.  1902):  360-36 4. 

1902.     The  American  negro's  religion  for  the  African  negro's  soul. 
Levi  J.  Coppin. 

Independent,  vol.  54  (Mar.  27,  1902):  748-750. 

1902.     The  new  race  question  in  the  South.     S.  A.  Hamilton. 

Arena,  vol.  27  (Apr.  1902):  352-358. 

1902.     The  settlement  idea  in  the  cotton  belt.     Pitt  Dillinghani. 

Outlook,  vol.  70  (Apr.  12,  1902):  920-1 


1902.     The  negro  and  higher  learning.     W.  S.  Scarborough. 
Forum,  vol.  33  (May,  1902):  349-355. 

1902.     Negro  disfranchisement  in  Louisiana.     Paul  L.  Haworth. 

Outlook,  vol.  71  (May  17,  1902):  162-166. 

1902.     Suffrage  in  the  South:  six  new  state  constitutions.     Chappell 
Cory. 

American  monthly  review  of  reviews,  vol.  25  (June,  1902): 
716-718. 

1902.     Shall  the  Southern  delegation  to  Congress  be  cut  down  ?  Edgar 

D.  Crumpacker. 
Frank  Leslie's  popular  monthly,  vol.  54  (July,  1902):  281-286. 


NEGKO  QUESTION:  AETICLES  iisr  PEEIODICALS  47 

1902.     Negrophilism  in  South  Africa.     M.  J.  Farrelly. 

Fortnightly  revieiv,  vol.  78  (Aug.,  1902}:  301-308. 

1902.     Of  the  training  of  black  men.     W.  E.  Burghardt  Du  Bois. 

Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  90  (Sept.,  1902}:  289-297. 

1902.     The  American  negro.     Cuyler  Smith. 

Frank  Leslie's  popular  monthly,  vol.  64.  (Sept.  1902}:  Jf.17- 

430. 

1902.     Colored  men  as  cotton  manufacturers.     Jerome  Dowd. 

Gunton's  magazine,  vol.  23  (Sept.  1902}:  254-256. 

1902.     The  negro  problem — how  it  appeals  to  a  Southern    colored 

woman. 
Independent,  vol.  54  (Sept.  18,  1902}:  2221-2224. 

1902.     The   negro   problem — how   it   appeals  to  a  Southern   white 

woman. 
Independent,  vol.  54  (Sept.  18,  1902):  2224-2228. 

1902.     Negro  conditions  sensibly  discussed.     A.  R.  Holcombe. 

Outlook,  vol.  72  (Sept.  20,  1902}:  170-173. 

1902.     The  crux  of  the  negro  question.     Henry  A.  Stimson. 

Bibliotheca  sacra,  vol.  59  (Oct.  1902}:  717-729. 

1902.     Insanity  and  the  negro.     M.  L.  Perry. 

Current  literature,  vol.  33  (Oct.  1902}:  467-468. 

1902.     A  plea  against  suffrage  restriction  in  the  South.    H.  D.  Money. 
Frank  Leslie1  s popular  monthly,  vol.  54 (Oct.  1902}:  609-613. 

1902.     The  negro  as  an  industrial  risk. 

Independent,  vol.  54  (Oct.  2,  1902):  2381. 

1902.     Suffrage  restriction  in  the  South;  its  causes  ana  consequences. 
Clarence  H.  Poe. 

North  American  review,  vol.  175  (Oct.  1902}:  534-563.  ' 

1902.     The  hope  of  the  negro.     J.  L.  Robinson. 
Open  court,  vol.  16  (Oct.  1902}: 

1902.     The  southern  republican  elimination  of  the  negro. 

World's  work,  vol.  4  (Oct.  1902}:  2591. 

1902.     The  negro  in  South  Africa  and  in  our.  southern  states. 
World's  work,  vol.  4  (Oct.  1902}:  2591-2592. 

1902.     The  national  negro  business  league.     Booker  T.  Washington. 
World's  work,  vol.  4  (Oct.  1902}:  2671-2675. 


48 
1902. 

1902. 
1902. 
1902. 

1902. 
1902. 
1902. 
1902. 
1903. 

1903. 
1903. 
1903. 

1903. 

1903. 
1903. 


LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

The  agricultural  negro.     Booker  T.  Washington. 
Arena,  vol.  28  (Nov.  1902}:  461-463. 

The  native  labour  question  in  South  Africa.     H.  H.  Johnston. 

Nineteenth  century,  vol.  52  (Nov.  1902}:  724-731. 

The  separate  street-car  law  in  New  Orleans.    A.  R.  Holcombe. 

Outlook,  vol.  72  (Nov.  29,  1902}:  746-747. 

An  Alabama  negro  sdhool.     Oswald  Garrison  Villard. 

American  monthly  review  of  reviews,  vol.    26   (Dec.   1902}: 
711-714. 

The  Anglo-Saxon  and  the  African.     Kelly  Miller. 
Arena,  vol.  28  (Dec.  1902}:  575-684. 

Right  of  negroes  to  hold  office. 
Independent,  vol.  54  (Dec.  J,,  1902}:  2855-2856. 

Color  line.     P.  Goddard. 
Independent,  vol.  53  (Dec.  5,  1902}:  2895-2897. 

The  President  on  the  appointment  of  negroes. 

Outlook,  vol.  72  (Dec.  6,  1902}:  759-760. 

The  evolution  of  negro  labor.     Carl  Kelsey. 

American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.     Annals, 
vol.  21  (Jan.,  1903}:  55-76. 

Deep  waters  of  the  race  problem. 
World's  work,  vol.  5  (Jan.,  1903}:  2935. 

The  new  aspect  of  the  negro  question.    Thomas  Nelson  Page. 

Collier's  weekly,  vol.  30  (Feb.  28,  1903}:  11. 

The  American  negro  historical  society  of  Philadelphia  and  its 
officers.     H.  Harrison  Wayman. 

Colored  American  magazine,  vol.  6  (Feb.,  1903):  287-294- 

Latest  phases  of  the  race  problem  in  America.     Sarah  A. 
Allen. 

Colored  American  'magazine,  vol.  6  (Feb.  ,  1903}  : 


The  negro  and  the  Philippines.     R.  B.  Lemus. 

Colored  American  magazine,  vol.  6  (Feb.  ,  1903}  :  314-318. 

Hopeful  position  of  the  negro. 

American  monthly  review  of  reviews,  vol.  27  (Mar.,  1903}: 


NEGRO  QUESTION:  ARTICLES  IN  PERIODICALS  49 

1903.     Settlement  work  among  colored  people.     Caroline  B.  Chapin. 
American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.     Annals, 
vol.  21  (Mar.  1903}:  336. 

1903.     The  negroes  of  St.  Louis.     Lilian  Brandt. 

American  statistical  association.      Quarterly  publications,  vol. 
8  (Mar.  1903}:  203-268. 

1903.     Die  Grenzen  des  amerikanischen  Auf  schwungs.     Wilhelm  von 
Polenz. 

Die    Grenzboten,  vol.  62  (Mar.    12,  1903}:    625-636;  (Mar. 
19,  1903}:  709-719;  (Mar.  26,  1903}:  753-765. 

1903.     The  President's  doctrine  and  the  facts  of  history. 
Harper's  weekly,  vol.  47  (Ma?'.  14,  1903}: 


1903.     Southern  ignorance  of  the  negro. 

Independent,  vol.  55  (Mar.  12,  1903}:  634-635. 

1903.     The  negro  and  the  trade  unions. 

Nation,  vol.  76  (Mar.  5,  1903}:  186-187. 

1903.     The  negro  and  public  office.     Joseph  B.  Bishop. 

International  quarterly,  vol.  7  (Mar.  -June,  1903}:  231-237. 

1903.     Negroes  and  poor  whites. 

Nation,  vol.  76  (Mar.  12,  1903}:  W^-205. 

1903.     The  race  problem. 

Outlook,  vol.  73  (Mar.  U,  1903}:  607-610. 

1903.     A  southern  view  of  the  negro.     L.  H.  Hammond. 

Outlook,  vol.  73  (Mar.  14,  1903}:  619-623. 

1903.     Changed  opinions  on  the  race  question. 

World's  work,  vol.  5  (Mar.,  1903}:  3156-3159. 

1903.     The  south  and  the  educated  negro. 

Nation,  vol.  76  (Apr.  23,  1903}:  32  4. 

1903.    The  mulatto  factor  in  the  race  problem.     Alfred  Holt  Stone. 

Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  91  (May,  1903}:  658-662. 

1903.    The  problem  of  the  blacks.     William  Hemstreet. 

Arena,  vol.  29  (May,  1903}:  495-499. 

1903.     The  Atlanta  university  conferences.     W.   E.   Burghardt  Du 
Bois. 

Charities,  vol.  10  (May  2,  1903}:  435-439. 

1903.     The  case  of  the  negro.     W.  H.  Johnson. 
Dial,  vol.  34  (May  1,  1903}:  299-302. 


50  LIBRAE Y    OF    CONGRESS 

1903.     The  future  of  the  negro.     Archibald  R.  Colquhoun. 

North  American  review,  vol.  176  (May,  1903} :  657-674- 

1903.     The  negro  problem.     J.  M.  Bicknell. 

Arena,  vol.  29  (June,  1903}:  611-615. 

1903.     The  negro  in  the  regular  army.     Oswald  Garrison  Villard. 
Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  91  (June,  1903}:  721-729. 

1903.     From  darkness  to  dawn:    Booker  T.  Washington's  work  of 
education  among  the  negroes.     Minerva  Spencer  Handy. 

Era  magazine,  vol.  12  (July,  1903):  3-13. 

1903.     A   lawj^er's    solution    of    the   negro    problem.     Charles   A. 
Gardiner. 

Literary  digest,  vol.  27  (July  11,  1903}:  36-37. 

1903.     Negro  criticism  of  Booker  T.  Washington. 

Literary  digest,  vol.  27  (July  11,  1903}:  37-38. 

1903.     The  American  negro  for  South  Africa.     D.  H.  Newland. 

Engineering  and  mining  journal,  vol.  76  (Aug.  29,  1903): 
308-309. 

1903.     The  negro  criminal.     George  B.  Winton. 

Harper's  weekly,  vol.  47  (Aug.  29,  1903}:  1414. 

1903.     The  successful  training  of  the  negro.     Booker  T.  Washington. 
World's  work,  vol.  6  (Aug.,  1903):  3731-3751. 

1903.     Negro  rural  schools  in  Virginia.     W.  T.  B.  Williams. 

Southern  workman,  vol.  32  (Aug. -Sept.,  1903}:  363,  Jf-13. 

1903.     Negro  education  in  the  South.     Walter  B.  Hill. 

American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.     Annals, 
vol.  22  (Sept.,  1903}:  76-85. 

1903.     The  race  problem  in  the  United  States.     Lyman  Abbott. 

American  monthly  review  of  reviews,  vol.  28  (Sept.,  1903}: 
321-325. 

1903.     Educating  the  American  negro:  the  work  of  Tuskegee  institute. 
H.  E.  Thomas. 

Gassier* s  magazine,  vol.  24  (Sept.,  1903}:  hlfl-lfid. 

1903.     Heroes  in  black  skins.     Booker  T.  Washington. 

Century  magazine,  vol.  66  (Sept.,  1903):  72^-729. 

1903.,     The  negro  problem  in  the  United  States.     John  A.  Hobson. 
Nineteenth  century  and  after,  vol.  54  ( Oct. ,  1903} :  581-594- 

1903.     Some  co-operating  causes  of  negro  lynching.     Henderson  M. 

Somerville. 
North  Amwican  review,  vol.  177  (Oct.,  1903}:  506-512. 


NEGRO  QUESTION:  ARTICLES  IN  PERIODICALS  51 

1903.     The  training  of  negroes  for  social  power.    W.  E.  B.  Du  Bois. 

Outlook,  vol.  75  (Oct.  17,  1903}:  409-414. 

1903.     Stirring  up  the  fires  of  race  antipathy.    John  Spencer  Bassett. 

South  Atlantic  quarterly,  vol.  2  (Oct.,  1903):  297-305. 

1903.     The  negro  farmer  in  the  Mississippi  delta.    Alfred  Holt  Stone. 

Southern  workman,  vol.  32  (Oct.,  1903):  457-460. 

1903.     The   negroes   of   Beaufort   county,    South   Carolina.      Niels 
Christensen,  jr. 

Southermvorkman,  vol.  32  (Oct.,  1903):  481-485. 

1903.     Old-time  negro  education  in  the  South.     G.  S.  Dickerman. 

Southern  workman,  vol.  32  (Oct.,  1903):  500-503. 

1903.     Some  charges  against  the  negro  race.     Booker  T.  Washington. 

Southern  workman,  vol.  32  (Oct.,  1903):  496-498. 

1903.     Racial  composition  of  the  American  people:  the  negro.    John  R, 
Commons. 

Chautauquan,  vol.  38  (Nov.,  1903):  223-234. 

1903.     The  fallacy  of  the  "  selected  group  "  in  the  discussion  of  the 
negro  question.     Talcott  Williams. 

Southern  workman,  vol.  32  (Nov.,  1903):  520-526. 

1903.     Proposed  solutions  of    the  negro  problem.      Samuel  Chiles 
Mitchell. 

Southern  workman,  vol.  32  (Nov.,  1903):  545-550. 

1903.     Where  negroes  may  not  come.     Albert  Bushnell  Hart. 
Harper's  weekly,  vol.  47  (Dec.  5,  1903):  1950. 

1903.  Mr.  Schurz  on  the  negro  problem. 

Nation,  vol.  77  (Dec.  31,  1903):  518-519. 

1904.  Statutory  prohibition  of  the  emigration  of  colored  laborers 

from  North  Carolina.     W.  A.  Guthrie. 

American  law  review,  vol.  38  (Jan.-Feb.,  1904):  14 4-145 • 

1904.     Can  the  South  solve  the  negro  problem  ?     Carl  Schurz. 
McClure's  magazine,  vol.  22  (Jan.,  1904):  259-275. 

1904.     Education  as  a  cause  of  negro  criminality.     J.  K.  Vardaman. 
Booker  T.  Washington. 

Literary  digest,  vol.  27  (Jan.  30,  1904):  137-138. 

1904.     Lawlessness  in  the  South :  an  analysis  of  conditions.     Henry 

N.  Snyder. 
Methodist  quarterly  review,  vol.  53  (Jan.,  1904)'  81-96. 


52  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

1904.     The  lynching-  of  negroes — its  cause  and  its  prevention.    Thomas 

Nelson  Page. 
North  American  review,  vol.  178  (Jan.,  1904):  33-48. 

1904.     The  negro  as  the  South  sees  him.     Joel  Chandler  Harris. 

Saturday  evening  j^ost,  vol.  176  (Jan.  2,  1904):   1-2,  23. 

1904.     The  negro  of  today:  his  prospects  and  his  discouragements. 

Joel  Chandler  Harris. 
Saturday  evening  post,  vol.  176  (Jan.  30,  1904):  2-5. 

1904.     The  black  belt.     Ulrich  B.  Phillips. 

Sewanee  review,  vol.  12  (Jan.,  1904):  73-77. 
Review  of  Carl  Kelsey's  The  negro  farmer. 

1904.     The  American  negro  artisan.     Thomas  J.  Calloway. 
Cassier's  magazine,  vol.  25  (Mar.,  1904):  4-35-445- 

1904.     The  negro:  the  southerner's  problem.     Thomas  Nelson  Page. 

McClure's  magazine,  vol.  22  (Mar.,  1904):  548-554,-  (Apr., 
1904):  619-626. 

1904.     Darkest  America.     Kelly  Miller. 

New  England  magazine,  vol.  30  (Mar. ,  1904)  •'  14~21. 

1904.     Die   Negerfrage   in   den  Vereinigten   Staaten  von  Amerika. 
Harry  A.  Fiedler. 

Preussische  Jahrbucher,  vol.  116  (Apr.,  1904)  •'  65-108. 

1904.     The  negroes  of  St.  Louis.     Lilian  Brandt. 

Southern  workman,  vol.  33  (Apr.,  1904)  •   223-228. 

1904.  The  negro  problem  from  the  negro  point  of  view.  I.  The 
Tuskegee  idea.  Booker  T.  Washington.  II.  Problems  of 
the  city  negro.  Kelly  Miller.  HI.  A  plea  for  fair  play. 
Jesse  Lawson.  IV.  Booker  T.  Washington  and  his  critics. 
Ida  B.  Wells-Barnett.  V.  The  parting  of  the  ways. 
W.  E.  Burghardt  Du  Bois. 
World  to-day,  vol.  6  (Apr.,  1904)  •  511-523. 

1904.     Part  of  a  man's  life  :  "intensely  human."     Thomas  Wentworth 

Higginson. 
Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  93  (May,  1904)  -    588-597. 

1904.     The  negro  as  a  peasant  farmer.     Katharine  Coman. 

American  statistical  association.     Quarterly  publications,  vol. 
9  (June,  1904):  39-54. 

1904.     The    progress    of   the   negro:    a   study  in   the   last   census. 

George  W.  Forbes. 
Arena,  vol.  32  (Aug.,  1904):  134-141. 


NEGRO  QUESTION:  AKTICLES  IN  PERIODICALS  53 

1904.     The  negro's  part  in  the  negro  problem.     Kelly  Miller. 

Forum,  vol.  36  (Oct.  -Dec.,  1904):  289-304. 

1904.     National  supervision  of  negro  education.     Carl  Holliday. 
South,  Atlantic  quarterly,  vol.  3,  (Oct.,  1904):  356-360. 

1904.     The  negro's  financial  contributions  to  negro  schools  in  Vir 
ginia.     W.  T.  B.  Williams. 

Southern  workman,  vol.  33  (Oct.,  1904):  550-554- 

1904.     The  value  of  educating  the  negro.     Bocker  T.  Washington. 

Southern  workman,  vol.  33  (Oct.,  1904):  558-564- 

1904.     Helping  the  negro  to  help  himself.     C.  C.  Smith. 

Outlook,  vol.  78  (Nov.  19,  1904):  727-730. 

"  Lowndes  county,  Alabama,  Land  company." 

1904.     The  old-time  negro.     Thomas  Nelson  Page. 

Scribner's  magazine,  vol.  36  (Nov.  ,  1904)  •'  522-532. 

1904.     Some  effects  of  the  negro's  poverty.     Roscoe  Conkling  Bruce. 

Southern  workman,  vol.  3  3  (Nov.,  1904): 


1904.     Census  statistics  of  the  negro.     Walter  F.  Willcox. 

Yale  rev  ieui,  vol.  13  (Nov.,  1904):  27^-286. 

1904.  The  white  peril:  the  immediate  danger  of  the  negro.     William 

Garrott  Brown. 

North  American  review,  vol.  179  (Dec.  ,  1904)  '  824-841. 

1905.  Reorganization  of  the  industrial  s}Tstem  in  Alabama  after  the 

Civil  war.     Walter  L.  Fleming. 
American  journal  of  sociology,  vol.  10  (Jan.,  1905):  Jfl  3-500. 

1905.     The  Italian  cotton  grower:  the  negro's  problem.     Alfred  Holt 
Stone. 

South  Atlantic  quarterly,  vol.  4  (Jan.,  1905):  J$-Jfl  . 

1905.     The  negro  in  Virginia.     C.  Braxton  Bryan. 

Southern  ivorkman,  vol.  34  (Jan.,  1905):  51-54;  (Feb.,  1905): 
100-108. 

1905.     The  economic  position  of  the  American  negro.    Report.     W.  F. 

Willcox  and  others. 

American  economic  association.     Publications,  3d  ser.,  vol.  6 
(Feb.,  1905):  216-221. 

1905.     A  plantation  experiment.     Alfred  Holt  Stone. 

Quarterly  journal  of  economics,  vol.  19  (Feb.,  1905):  270-287. 
A  discussion  of  an  experiment  six  years  after  its  inception,  which 
was  described  in  a  paper  by  the  same  author  on  "The  negro  in 
the  Yazoo-Missi?sippi  Delta." 


5-4  LIBEAEY    OF    CONGRESS 

1905.     A  negro's  chance:  how  the  race  problem  is  answered  in  the 
blackest  portion  of  the  black  belt.     [Mississippi.]     B.    G. 
Humphreys. 
Saturday  evening  post,  vol.  177  (Feb.  11,  1905}:  1-2. 

1905.     The  negro  in  Virginia.     Ft.  III.     C.  Braxton  Bryan. 

Southern  workman,  vol.  3 '4  (Mar.,  1905):  170-179. 

1905.     The  Tuskegee  negro  conference.     Thomas  Jesse  Jones. 
Southern  workman,  vol.  34  (Apr.,  1905):  204-207. 

1905.     Remedies  for  the  southern  problem.     Albert  Bushnell  Hart. 
Independent,  vol.  58  (May '4,  1905):  993-996. 

1905.     The  economic  cost  of  slaveholding  in  the  cotton  belt.     Ulrich 
B.  Phillips. 

Political  science  quarterly,  vol.  20  (June,  1905) :  257-275. 

1905.     The  negro  south  and  north.     W.  E.  Burghardt  Du  Bois. 

Bibliotheca,  sacra,  vol.  62  (July,  1905) :  500-513.  x 

1905.     The  religious  life  of  the  negro.     Booker  T.  Washington. 

North  American  review,  vol.  181  (July,  1905):  20-23. 

1905.     The  south  and  the  negro.     Booker  T.  Washington. 

Southern  workman,  vol.  34  (July,  1905):  400-405. 

1905.     "The  negro  a  beast."     Edward  Atkinson. 

North  American  review,  vol.  181  (Aug. ,  1905) :  202-215. 

1905.     The  negro  helping  himself.     Rufus  Rockwell  WTilson. 
Public  opinion,  vol.  39  (Aug.  5,  1905):  166-169. 

1905.     The  probable  increase  of  the  negro  race  in  the  United  States. 
Walter  F.  Willcox. 

Quarterly  journal  of  economics,  vol.  19  (Aug.,  1905):  545-572. 

1905.     Booker  T.  Washington  and  the  negro:  some  dangerous  aspects 

of  the  work  of  Tuskegee.     Thomas  Dixon,  jr. 
/Saturday  evening  post,  vol.  178  (Aug.  19,  1905) :  1-2. 

1905.     The  negro  race  and  European  civilization.     Paul  S.  Reinsch. 
American  journal  of  sociology,  vol.  11  (Sept.,  1905):  145-167, 

1905.     The  religion  of  the  American  negro.     F.  M.  Davenport. 

Contemporary  review,  vol.  88  (Sept.,  1905):  369-375. 
Eclectic  magazine,  vol.  145  (Dec.,  1905):  609-614- 


NEGRO  QUESTION:  ARTICLES  IN  PERIODICALS  55 

1905.     The  negro  in  the  cities  of  the  north. 

Charities,  vol.  15  (Oct.  7,  1905):  1-96. 

CONTENTS. — The  inake-up  of  negro  city  groups.  Lilian  Brandt,  pp. 
7-11;  Assisted  emigration  from  the  South:  the  women.  Frances 
A.  Kellor,  pp.  11-14;  Some  causes  of  negro  emigration:  the  men. 
Carl  Kelsey,  pp.  15-17;  Why  should  negro  business  men  go  South? 
Booker  T.  Washington,  pp.  17-19.  Kowaliga:  a  community  with 
a  purpose.  William  E.  Benson,  pp.  22-24;  The  negro  home  in 
New  York.  Mary  White  Ovington,  pp.  25-30;  The  black  vote  of 
Philadelphia.  W.  E.  Burghardt  Du  Bois,  pp.  31-35;  Industrial 
conditions  among  negro  men  in  Boston.  John  Daniels,  pp.  35-39; 
Social  bonds  in  the  "black  belt"  of  Chicago.  Fannie  Barrier 
Williams,  pp.  40-44;  Some  causes  of  criminality  among  colored 
people.  J.  H.  N.  Waring,  pp.  45-49;  Negro  dependence  in  Balti 
more.  Helen  B.  Pendleton,  pp.  50-58;  The  negro  of  to-day  in 
music.  James  W.  Johnson,  pp.  58-59;  Mission  sketches,  pp. 
59-63;  A  social  settlement  in  south  Washington.  Sarah  Collins 
Fernandis,  pp.  64—66;  The  negro  press  in  America.  L.  M.  Her- 
shaw,  pp.  66-68;  The  negro  in  times  of  industrial  unrest.  R.  R. 
Wright,  jr.,  pp.  69-73;  In  the  day's  work  of  a  visiting  nurse. 
Jessie  C.  Sleet,  pp.  73-74;  The  negro  church  and  its  social  work: 
St.  Mark's.  Maude  K.  Griffin,  pp.  75-76;  The  school  as  a  social 
center.  William  L.  Bulkley,  pp.  76-78;  Court  studies  from  life. 
Lucy  F.  Friday,  pp.  79-81;  Children  of  the  circle.  Helena  Titus 
Emerson,  pp.  81-83;  Manual  training  for  negro  children.  David 
E.  Gordon,  p.  84;  The  negro  and  the  demands  of  modern  life. 
Franz  Boas,  pp.  85-88;  In  the  country  at  large.  Thomas  Jesse 
Jones,  pp.  88-96. 

1905.     Future  of  the  negro  in  America:  will  the  race  become  extinct? 
John  P.  Heap. 

National  magazine,  vol.  23  (Oct.,  1905):  105-108. 

1905.     Negro  concentration  in  the  South.     How  racial  distribution  is 
determined  in  the  South  by  geographical,  not  by  political 
forces.     Edwin  C.  Eckel. 
World  to-day,  vol.  9  (Nov.,  1905):  1215-1220. 

1905.  Le  probleme   noir  aux   Etats-Unis  d'Amerique.      L.   J.   de 

Lavigne  Sainte-Suzanne. 

Revue  politique  et  parlementaire,  vol.  4.6   (Dec.   10,   1905): 
573-581. 

1906.  The  negro  in  business.     Booker  T.  Washington. 

American  illustrated  inagazine,  vol.  61  (Jan.,  1906):  340-345- 

1906.     The  heart  of  the  race  problem.     Archibald  H.  Grimke. 

Arena,  vol.35  (Jan.,  1906):  29-32;  (Mar,  1906):  274-278. 

1906.     Some  psychological  considerations  in  the  race  problem.     Her 
bert  A.  Miller. 
Bibliotheca  sacra,  vol.  63  (Apr.,  1906):  352-363. 


56  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

1906.     Race  questions  and  prejudices.     Josiah  Royce. 

International  journal  of  ethics,  vol.  16  (Apr.,  1906):  265-288. 

1906.     Tuskegee:  a  retrospect  and  prospect.     Booker  T.  Washington. 
North  American  review,  vol.  182  (Apr.,  1906}:  513-523. 

1906.     Twenty-five  years  of  Tuskegee.     Booker  T.  Washington. 

World's  work,  vol.  11  (Apr.,  1906}:  7433-7450. 

1906.     The  industrial  condition  of  the  negro  in  the  North. 

American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.     Annals, 
vol.  27  (May,  1906}:  543-609. 

CONTENTS. — The  economic  handicap  of  the  negro  in  the  North, 
Kelly  Miller;  The  negro  in  the  trades  unions  in  New  York,  Mary 
White  Ovington;  The  migration  of  negroes  to  the  North,  R.  R. 
Wright,  jr. ;  The  training  of  the  negro  laborer  in  the  North,  Hugh 
M.  Browne;  The  industrial  condition  of  the  negro  in  New  York 
City,  William  L.  Bulkley;  The  three  amendments,  John  Bascom. 

1906.     "Forty  acres  and  a  mule."     Walter  L.  Fleming. 

North  American  review,  vol.  182  (May,  1906}:  721-737. 

1906.     The  Freedmen's  Saving  bank.     Walter  L.  Fleming. 
The  Yale  review,  vol.  15  (May,  1906}:  40-67. 


AUTHOR  IOT3EX 


Page 

Abbott,  A.  R 41 

Abbott,  Ernest  Hamlin 5 

Abbott,  Lyman 50 

Alexander,  William  T 17 

Allen,  Sarah  A 48 

Allen,  William  G 17 

American  academy  of  political  and 

social  science 5 

American  negro  academy 5, 17 

Anderson,  Matthew 24 

Armistead,  W.  S 18 

Armstrong  association 18 

Atkins,  S.G 24 

Atkinson,  Edward 18,  54 

Atlanta  university 18 

Babbitt,  Dean  Richmond 35 

Bailey,  Joseph  W 44, 45 

Baker,  H.E 24 

Baldwin,  Marie  L 24 

Baldwin,  William  H  ,  jr 5 

Banks,  Elizabeth  L e 40 

Barksdale,  Ethelbert 25 

Barnett,  Ida  B.  Wells 41 

Barrett,  Harris 24 

Barringer,  Paul  Brandon 5,13,44 

Barrows,  Isabel  C 42 

Bascom,  John 56 

Bassett,  John  Spencer 51 

Bellamy,  Francis 38 

Benson,  William  E 55 

Bicknell,  J.  M 50 

Bishop,  Joseph  B 49 

Blackford,  Charles  Minor,  jr 41 

Blaine,  James  G 37 

Blair,  Henry  W 46 

Blair,  Lewis  H 6 

Blair,  Montgomery 37 

Blauvelt,  Mary  Taylor 44 

Blyden,  Edward  W 6 

Boas,  Franz 18, 55 


Page 

Booth,  Percy  N 40 

Bowen,  J.  W.  E 12 

Bowser,  Rosa  D 24,25 

Brackett,  Jeffrey  R 6 

Bragg,  George  F 34 

Brandt,  Lilian 18,  49,  52, 55 

Brannon,  Henry 6 

Breckinridge,  Clifton  C 13 

Brooks,  Calvin  Herlock 18 

Brooks,  Walter  H 35 

Brorup,  Rasmus  Peterson 19 

Brousseau,  Kate 19 

Brown,  C.  C 13 

Brown,  William  Garrott 6, 53 

Brown,  William  Wells 19 

Browne,  Hugh  M 24,56 

Bruce,  H.  Addington 27 

Bruce,  Philip  Alexander 6, 41 

Bruce,  Roscoe  Conkling 53 

Bryan,  C.  Braxton 53,54 

Bryce,  James 37 

Bulkley,  William  L 55, 56 

Bullard,  R.  L 19 

Burgess,  John  William 19 

Burrell,  W.  P 25 

Butler,  Marion 42 

Cable,  George  Washington 6,  37 

Calhoun,  William  Patrick 7 

Galloway,  Thomas  J 24,  52 

Campbell,  Sir  George 19 

Campbell,  R.  F 24 

Candler,  W.  A 30 

Carnegie,  Andrew 18 

Carroll,  Charles 19 

Carver,  G.  W 24 

Chamberlain,  Daniel  H 37, 44 

Chandler,  Julian  A.  C 7 

Chapin,  Caroline  B 49 

Chase,  Thomas  N 20 

Chesnutt,  Charles  W 29 

57 


58 


AUTHOR   INDEX 


Christensen,  Niels,  jr 

Christmas,  L.  T 

Clayton,  Joseph  Culbertson 

Clayton,  Virginia  V 

Clowes,  W.  Laird 

Coan,  Titus  Munson 

Cockran,  W.  Bourke 

Colquhoun,  Archibald  R 


Page 
51 
7 
45 

7 
5 
13 
50 

Colson,  J.  M 24,25 

Coman,  Katherine 52 

Commons,  J.  R 51 

Conference  for  education   in   the 

South  19,20 

Conference  for  investigation  of  city 

problems 20 

Cook,  Charles  C 7,17 

Coombs,  A.  G 21 

Coppin,  Levi  J 46 

Corey,  G 45 

Cory,  Chappell 46 

Councill,  W.  H 39,40 

Craighead,  James  B 37 

Crapsey,  Algernon  S 35 

Crogman,  W.  H 9,26 

Cromwell,  John  W 17, 20, 24, 25 

Cross,  Samuel  Creed 7 

Crummell,  Alexander 17,20 

Crumpacker,  Edgar  D 46 

Gulp,  Daniel  Wallace 7 

Curry,  J.  L.  M 7, 13, 16, 34,  38, 40 

Cutler,  James  Elbert 20 

Dabney,  Charles  William 21 

Daniels,  John 55 

Davenport,  F.  M 54 

Davis,  L.  D 21 

Davis,  Rebecca  Harding 46 

Dawson,  Marion  L 44 

DeLisser  H.  C 41 

Dickerman,  G.  S 51 

Dillingham,  Pitt 46 

Dixon,  Thomas,  jr 54 

Dowd,  Jerome 43, 47 

Dowman,  C.  E 30 

Dreher,  Julius  D 13 

Du  Bois,   William  Edward  Burg- 

hardt 5,  8,  9, 17, 18, 21, 22,  29,  33,38, 

39, 40,  43,  45, 47, 49, 51,  52,  54, 55 

Dunbar,  Paul  Lawrence 29 

Duncan,  B.  Odell 40 

Dunning,  William  A 45 

Dyke,  Charles  B 46 

Eastman,  Henry  Parker 22 

Eaton,  Isabel 8,22 


Eckel,  Edwin  C 

Edmonds,  R.  H 

Elias  y  Pujol,  Alfredo 

Eliot,  Charles  W 

Ell  wood,  Charles  A 

Elwang,  William  Wilson. 
Emerson,  Helena  Titus  . . 

Evans,  L.  B 

Evans,  W.  B  . . 


Pagre 

55 

30 

16 

18 

22 

22 
55 

38 

25 

Faduma,  Orishatukeh 17, 22 

Farrelly,  M.  J 47 

Fernandis,  Sarah  Collins 55 

Ferrer  de  Couto,  Jose 9 

Fiedler,  Harry  A 52 

Fishback,  W.  M 25 

Fleming,  Walter  Lynwood 22,  53,  56 

Foard,  John  Frederick _.         22 

Forbes,  George  W 52 

Fortune,  T.  Thomas 9, 29, 33,  40 

Fowler,  William  Chauncey 23 

Fox,  John,j> 45 

Friday,  Lucy  F 55 

Frissell,  Hollis  B 13, 18, 24 

Gaines,  D.  B. 9 

Gaines,  Wesley  J 23 

Galloway,  Charles  Betts 23 

Gannett,  Henry 9 

Gardiner,  Charles  A 50 

Garfield,  James  A 37 

Garner,  James  Wilford 23 

Gaston,  J.  B 13 

Gibson,  J.  W 9 

Gilman,  Daniel  Coit 23 

Goddard,  P 48 

Godkin,  E.  L 37 

Goodrich,  C.  L 24 

Gordon,  David  E 55 

Grady,  Benjamin  Franklin 23 

Grady,  Henry  W 30,37 

Graves,  John  T 13,30 

Green,  John  P 34 

Gresham,  G.  N 24 

Griffin,  Maude  K 55 

Grimke,  Archibald  H 17, 24,  55 

Grimke,  Francis  James 17,  23,  24,  25 

Grosvenor,  Charles  Henry 42 

Guerry,  W.  A 13 

Guild,  Walter 43 

Gunby,  A.  A 23 

Guthrie,  James  M 9 

Guthrie,  W.  A 51 

Guthrie,  William  D 9 

Hamilton,  James  Cleland 40 


AUTHOB   INDEX 


59 


Page 

Hamilton,  S.  A 46 

Hamm,  Walter  C 39 

Hammond,  L.  II 49 

Hampton,  Wade 37 

Hampton  negro  conference 24,  25 

Hampton  normal  and  agricultural 

institute 9 

Handy,  Minerva  Spencer 50 

Harris,  Joel  Chandler 52 

Harris,  Mm.  L.  II '. . .         39 

Harris,  Norman  Dwight 25 

Hart,  Albert  Bushnell 37,  51,  54 

Hawley,  Walter  L 43 

Haworth,  Paul  L 46 

Haynes,  (i.  II 10 

Heap,  John  P 55 

Hemphill,  John  J 25 

Hemstreet,  William 49 

Hendricks,  Thomas  A 37 

Herbert,  Hilary  A 5, 10, 13,  25, 44, 45 

Hershaw,  L.  M 35,  55 

Higginson,  Thomas  Wentworth  ..  31,52 

Hill^  Walter  B '. .  25,  26, 50 

Hilyer,  Andrew  F 24 

Hoar,  George  Frisbie 10 

Hobson,  ?:iizabeth  C 26 

Hobson,  John  A 50 

Hoffman,  Frederick  L 10 

Holcombe,  A.  R 47,48 

Holliday,  Carl 53 

Holly,  James  T 39 

Holsey,  Lucius  H 30,34 

Holt,  George  C 26 

Hope,  John 17 

Hopkins,  Charlotte  E 26 

Humphreys,  B.  G 54 

Ingle,  Edward 10 

Jackson,  Julia  C 25 

Jemand,  Amanda  Smith 44 

John  F.  Slater  fund  for  the  educa 
tion  of  f reedmen 13,  26 

Johnson,  Edward  Augustus  ...  10,  26,  35 

Johnson,  James  W 55 

Johnson,  John  Quincy 26 

Johnson,  W.  H 49 

Johnson,  William  Bishop 26 

Johnston,  H.  H 48 

Johnston,  Joseph  F 13,  39 

Jones,  Ira  P 25 

Jones,  Thomas  Jesse 54,55 

Joseph,  E.  B 13 

Kealing,  H.  T 29 

Kellor,  Frances  A 43,55 


Page 

Kelsey,  Carl 26,48,55 

Kettell,  Thomas  Prentice 10 

King,  Alex.  C 13 

Kletzing,  Henry  F 26 

Kruse,  Miss  E.B 25 

Lamar,  L.  Q.  C 37 

Laney,  Lucy  C 24 

Laws,  J.  Bradford 10 

Lawson,  Jesse 34, 52 

Le  Conte,  Joseph 10 

Leigh,  Frances  Butler 26 

Lemon,  John  W 24 

Lemus,  R.  B 48 

Leroy-Beaulieu,  Pierre 27 

Lewis,  Samuel 6 

Liberia 27 

Lilly,  D.  Clay 13 

Lindsay,  S.  M 13 

Livermore,  George 27 

Livingstone,  William  P 27 

Locke,  Mary  Stoughton 27 

Long,  O.  S 25 

Love,  John  L 11, 17 

Lowell,  James  Russell 27 

McCockle,  William  A 13 

McCurley,  W.  S 39 

McGovern,  J.  Montgomery 39 

McKelway,  A.  J 38,42 

McKinley,  Carlyle 27 

McLeod,  J.  M 22 

MacNair,  Colin 27 

Manning,  Joseph  C 28 

Massachusetts.     Bureau  of  statistics 

of  labor 28 

Matthews,  Victoria  E 24,  33 

Mayo,  A.  D 11,28,34 

Mebane,  George  Allen 43 

Merriam,  George  Spring 28 

Merriam,  William  R 45 

Miller,  HerbertA 55 

Miller,  Kelly 11, 

17,  24,  25, 38, 44,  46,  48, 52,  53, 56 

Miller,  Oliver  C 5 

Mitchell,  Samuel  Chiles 51 

Moffat,  R.  Burnham 28 

Money,  H.D 47 

Moorland,  J.  E 25 

Morehouse,  F.  C 7 

Morgan,  John  T 11 

Morgan,  Thomas  J 11 

Moritzen,  Julius 44 

Morris,  S.  L 28 

Moton,  R.  R 25 


AUTHOR    INDEX 


Page 

Murphy,  Edgar  Gardner 28 

Murphy,  Jeannette  Robinson 29 

Murray,  Daniel 35 

Nash,  Charles  E 11 

National  negro  business  league 11 

Newland,  D.  H 50 

Newman,  Francis  William 29 

Nieboer,  H.  J 11 

Northen,  W.  J 30 

Northrop,  Henry  Davenport 12 

Northrop,  Joseph  R.  Gay 12 

Oakrnan,  Walter  G 45 

0 vington,  Mary  White 55,  56 

Page,  Thomas  Nelson.  29,  37,  45, 48, 52,  53 

Parks,  W .  B 30 

Pasco,  Samuel 25 

Peirce,  Paul  Skeels 30 

Pell,  Edward  Leigh 12 

Pendleton,  Helen  B 55 

Penn,  I.  Garland 12 

Pepper,  Charles  M 5 

Perry,  M.  L 47 

Pettiford,  W.  R 25 

Philipps,  Henry  L 41 

Phillips,  UlrichB 52,54 

Phillips,  Wendell 37 

Pierce,  Charles  C 5 

Pierce,  Edward  L 12 

Pike,  Godfrey  Holden 30 

Pike,  James  S 12 

Platt,  OrvilleH 5 

Poe,  Clarence  H 47 

Polenz,  Wilhelm  von 49 

Prather,  J.  W 25 

Presley,  Samuel  C 12 

Price,  Thomas  F 40 

Prichard,  Hesketh 12 

Proctor,  H.  H 21 

Purves,  Alexander 24 

Reed,  John  C 30 

Reid,  Whitelaw 32 

Reid,  William  M 24 

Reinsch,  Paul  S 54 

Reynolds,  L.  H 24 

Richings,  G.  F 12,30 

Riley,  Jerome  R 12 

Robinson,  J.  L 47 

Ross,  Edward  A 5 

Royall,  William  L 13 

Royce,  Josiah 56 

Sadler,  M.  E 13 

Sage,  B.  J 25 

Sainte-Suzanne,  L.  J.  de  Lavigne  .  55 

Sanborn,  F.  B 21 


Page 

Satterthwait,  L 38 

Scarborough,  W.  S. . .   17,  24,  25,  43,  45,  46 

Schell,  William  Gallio 30 

Scholes,  Theophilus  E.  Samuel ...  31 

Schurz,  Carl 51 

Scott,  Emmett  J 34 

Shadd,  F.  J 24,  25 

Shaler,  Nathaniel  Southgate 31 ,  42 

Shaw,  Albert 38,  41 

Simmons,  Enoch  S 31 

Simmons,  William  J 31 

Simpson,  Samuel 31 

Sinclair,  William  A 31 

Slattery,  J.  R 13 

Sleet,  Jessie  C 55 

Smith,  C.  C 53 

Smith,  Cuyler 47 

Smith,  Hoke 32 

Smith,  ReubenS 34 

Smith,  Robert  L  25,41 

Smith,  William  Benjamin 32 

Smith,  William  Henry 29,  32 

Smyth,  John  Henry 24 

Snyder,  Henry  N 51 

Somerville,  Henderson  M 50 

Spahr,  Charles  B 14,  39 

Speed,  Jno.  Gilmer 43 

Spiller,  Richard 24 

Steiner,  Bernard  C 40 

Stemons,  James  S 42 

Stephens,  Alexander  H 37 

Stetson,  George  R 14 

Stevens,  A.  W 12 

Stevens,  Mrs.  S.  B 24 

Stevens,  William 32 

Steward,  T.  G 17 

Stewart,  Charles 25 

Stiles,  Robert 25 

Stimson,  Henry  A 47 

Stone,  Alfred  Holt 14, 49,  51,  53 

Straton,  John  Roach 42 

Sutton,  Edwin  H 14 

Syphax,  Minn  C.  E 24 

Tarver,  H.  M 32 

Terrell,  Robert  H 32 

Thacher,  G.  A 45 

Thorn,  William  Taylor 14 

Thomas,  H.  E 50 

Thomas,  William  Hannibal 14 

Thrasher,  Max  Bennett 14, 42, 44, 45 

Tillinghast,  Joseph  Alexander 14 

Timmons,  R 30 

Titus,  Mrs.  Casper 24 

Tobias,  D.  E 40 


61 


Page 
14 
41 
32 
24 
25 


Tourgee,  Albion  W 

Trent,  W.  P 

Tricoche,  George  Xestler 

Tunnell,  William  V 

Turner,  H.  G 

Turner,  Henry  M 30,  31 

Underwood,  Oscar  W 43 

United  States.     Bureau  of  the  Cen 
sus  - 33 

15 
15 
15 

44 

33 
25 
51 
25 

Villard,  Oswald  Garrison 48,  50 

Virey,  Julien  Joseph 33 

Waddell,  Alfred  Moore 13 

WTalker,  Francis  A 37 

Walker,  H.  de  R 33 

Waller,  G.  R 24 

Waring,  J.  II.  N 55 

Warner,  Charles  Dudley 33 

Washington,  Booker  Taliaferro.  14, 16, 18, 
24,  26,  29,  30,  33,  34,  35,  38,  39,  40,  41,  42, 
43, 44,  46,  47, 48,  50,  51,  52,  53,  54,  55,  56 


Bureau  of  education  .. 

Congress 

Department  of  labor  .. 

Vail,  Charles  H 

Vance,  Joseph  Anderson. 

Vance,  Zebnlon  B 

Vardaman,  J.  K 

Vest,  G.  G 


Washington,  Georgia 

Way  man,  II.  Harrison 

Weeks,  Stephen  Beauregard 

Wells-Barnett,  Ida  B 

West,  H,  L 

West,  Max 

WThite,  George  H 

Wickliffe,  John  C 

Wilder,  J.  R 

Willcox,  Walter  F 16, 33, 

Willey,  D.  Allen 

Williams,  Fannie  Barrier. . .  16,  25, 

Williams,  George  Washington 

Williams,  Talcott 

Williams,  W.  T.  B 25, 

Wilson,  Henry 

Wilson,  Joseph  T 

Wilson,  Rufus  Rockwell 

Wilson,  W 

Wilson,  W.  L 

Wimberly,  A.  T 

Winston,  George  T 

Winton,  George  B 

Wood,  X.  B 

Woolman,  Mary  S 

Work,  Monroe  N 

Wright,  R.  R.,jr 

Young,  Nathan  B 


25 
48 
35 
52 
39 

16,43 
34 
38 
35 

53,54 
42 

29,55 
35 
51 

50,53 
35 
35 
54 
43 
25 
35 
5 

50 

29 

•24 

21,43 

55,56 
44 


O 


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